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VOLUME XLIJ. COLUMBUS, OHIO, TUESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1852. NUMBER 49. llH'tklii (Dl)io Stole Journal 13 I'PltLISilKH AT I'Ol.iMIHIH EVBItV TUKXHAY MolUINtl, 401. A L BlilUUMiK, SCOTT ft BASCOM, ltlll AMI I'Ellit BTUIAM K!VTKAN'K . -111 I r and ii) TMlMS-hni,! by until. M fl; Ha Till: lAfl,Y .lnt'ltNAI. I- lun.i-hisl toHiy xul.: iiixl In iiutil ( SsYunti vini. TIIK TUI-n KWilA .KM ItNAI, 1h 11 u yi-ur. UA TKS Oh' A U VF.H TlSttiti IS TtlH WHIM I. V . 17.' .V.I . l u ii and. ii'i-illsri at tfiUXi, " 3 I -E -9 -5 1 -2 mill h-siowiug lii" Vioeroyalty upon some nlliei branch of Mohammed Ali' family perhaps Sayd Pasha. will li Hilly succeed, tit. least for Iheprosont, niuj though it in tn In- doubted whether Ilia change would be much lor the belter, it could nut be for the worao. Sayd Pasha rrijili-ft here, am) in itt present Ailminil of the Kgyplian Navy. He )h n mull of some intelligence, lor iin Kgyplian. Fund Kifondi, the Kuvoy lately sent Irom the Porta, it) nlso hero, uud doing nothing. Kvo-ry tiling is in almost I ho Hume state of uncertainty as when l first lm nl cd in Kgypt. If the rumor in regard tn England in corroi t, it will delay u crisis for idiiiu linn', hut can hardly prevent it. I suppose some account of a difficulty between our Consul General mid tho Egyptian Govt.-mm cut has al-ri'iidy reached yon. Tito luct are simply these; Mr. McCuuley hud urged ihe claim of fv. Uarthow, an American, upon tho Government, and on finding the (finer resolved to protract iho atlair l'ur a noodles length nt limes declared that unload it wore not ud-jugiml within a ceriuin time, ho should break nil nil diplomatic relaii'.iis, atid strike his Hag. This de-iiimid met with no response whatever, and nt tin np-(minted limn lie wax ns good us his word. Tim Prime Minister hpcamo alarmed; a messenger wns domiciled lo I ho Viceroy, whu was then iu Upper Kgypt, mid il jo wholt) nll'ur wns settled wild mi alacrity most nu-i urn ii I in B-'vpiian olliciula. Tho Miiir was Imiftcd n(,'(iii, under a Hrthitu uf iwM)ty-ono uim I'min iln lor- irt'Hi, nil thti ciihitr rnruin UuiihiiIa humtiiifr ilu-ir cul-om at lint ami) time. Tint iR-riirn-iico, whnti'vcr may Iin thought nt' it at homo, produced a marked impreH-nion hero, and I liavii hennl the Coiimil-Generul'H roiiitie Hlrin,''ly coiiiiiifiulfd by KnriMii'iin renliletitn. 1 think it nun hardly IhiI to iiroilucu an oxcetleut etl't'Ct; lor it niTnntuiDTniua iw rnvPT-THE TflVPTT A W Mi ""iv v prompt ami viuiiruui ucuou nil un pun in 1 M,u,r 7M 4 -..um 1 lliillrllliU' ainl!il' i i'.ii fin i if. '"Mi '.n no; lllir. INOj ti H ll II ;, not; ti hi n. 17. : di in. i t. s-i. : iltur 1 minimi, ('Iiuiil'-mI-I" i in 'v I'liluniu, v nn i-A'-n t'li 'l1'"1'1 1 1'oliima, 1 cliutii';ill' 1 1 -1 1 lOllaci i.f tlii-tsl.r.l t ' t-iiriliTv,! on tlir iii'iilc 'M ln-i Ilu.IiiI milieu- i lm rpil .iinibtc, i-lv.... r.lv.... Iilili' tlx- ut- i.nMir. .t im il M.1i-I. III". A'lvi-itf-M iiiriii GOVKIINMENX ALEXANDUIA, Alkxanihiia, B.'ypt, Ajiril 111, The Indian Mail uuil iaM8uiii.'TR puHxed ilimuli Cairo llio liny afmr I iirrived, and nn tln-re wan no iec-niid ntciimiT down tlio Nile lorn wot;k, 1 had iimpl time tn Ileal my eyes, (which were iiiilrh dninnyed by I ha pnruHntof lotteri niid papers IVoin honm,) mid to sen nil th M(ilHi o! O;iiro, widish I had been obliged tn hmvn uiisetin, oil my Ihat vinii. Tho first two or three days of my stay worn Jiuie-liko nml dnlirioiut. The hedges and fhruhbery in tlm f-rtmt fipiaro, or rather park, of the Kbekieh were iu hliHsoui, and all llie gardens betwueti tlii city and tlm Nilo wi-m atfcped in the fraf(ratii:n f Imiinu blociiniiis. The 1'i-w deeiiln-otm trees wi-re tdollied in a t.-iuhir $wh, exrejit llie Bcncia, which remnmhers it liir hotim in Centrnl Alii-ca, and drops iul'iiliagn nt tho s'linw lime with il h brothers there. Fveryduyils yellow luavos rattled lo tin grnnud and its bmifilli grew more bam: ho that when I rude down the magnilicciit avenuo to (he palace of Hhoiihra, I nw tintliin;: but hiiiihumiI pictures. In the Khekiveli it was ibo laih n' May; while llioe who visited Ihe I'yramtds nuie over harvest fields, piled will) sheavefi. The excursion which I bIdiII longest reineinbur, was to lli-liopolis, about Iwn bours diilnnt. Tha nuul is bordered by large liehls of young clover, in whi li the Cairo horses were turned loose tor their numiid six weeks' piisturne The olive orchard nn eirln-r hand Wi-rn just beginning to bloom; the li;; tree was putting tortli her young shoots, and the vim, with the tender grape gave a goodly funell. It whs a plain n tho freshest garden untl pasture-land, relieved by the grnnd objects which elevated themselves above ami around its charmed horizon. Vi-nder, the purple l'yru-inids; in the S'HUli, the minarets of Cairo; there, the diMiies nf the tombs ol lh Caliphs; and the red Arabian Mountains, Mretclnn uway Inward Suez. Of lleliopolis, there is iit-thini; left but some mounds, sprinkled with hewn sloiie, mid a single granile obelisk, of a date aiiterinr to I ho time of .lnuppli. On the rotiirn to Cairo, I visited it garden belonging ton Cop-tic monastery, wle n in stand- n huge syo.uuoie tree, under which the Virgin ntnl Child rested, on first reaching Knypt. It is prnbably ii ihniismid years old, but that makes no dillerence lo the true believers, great numbers of whom have taken pains to attest their faith liy their names, which lin y have enrved deeply into the bark. Itut 1 have not the slightest doubt that il the true tables nf the hiw were iu existence and placed where the bunds of Chrmiitii travelem could rendi Ilium, the eriditial inscription would be obliterated in employment. And litis, I cm, insure yu it, good render, i a very small item m the iniquity of the finglif h tm law. Do iu longer wonder (hut Ireland is being decimated, nml England much thinned nf its inhabitants by einigi utiim J Thorn nre several iiieniburs uf the House of herds who have acquired (heir title to scats there in rather nn ambiguous way. For instnnco, the Duke of Cambridge, grand-Mill of George IV., ly the Duehesi id' Cambridge, an illegitimate ollspring, is allowed the title of his father only by courtesy, and upon condition, that lie never marries, ao that the title will expire with him. This gentleman, being u cousin of the Queen ou the father's Mile, it h said will, upon the decease of the Duke of Wellington, succeed to the olllce of comimitiderin-Ohief of tho army, nnil wo could not but remark upon the injustice of such an appointment, when looking at "his unexperienced fled tiling tho other day at a grand military ruview at Wo dwich, surrounded liy a brilliant tall' of nU wm-"oru votorniw, amongst whom were Lord Hardinge, Sir H. I. Knsi, find oilier of the dintinguislied old men who buvn hum conducting the wars in I ml in and at the Cape of fjnnd Hope. Charles II., by Ida uiistres. es, hud the honor of placing several Dukes in the House of 1'eors some of them by tho famous Nell (iwynue, others by the equally I'imouH ami eipiiilly lieautjlnl Duchess of Portsmouth, The present Dnko of Si. Albans is a great great grandson nf Charles I. and Nell Gwynne; and Btruiigo enough, a year or two since, married a lady lor her beauty, out of the same station and occupation that of a low comedian. our representatives, that the no pert tine lo Iho Amen i:au name can lm tiMauli.dicu in Ihe ignorant Orient. The rilv is Inll f K.,m.M..n u.Mti ! M...l a -wy'"-' otherwise, m.muof whom have fnruuil unimn and enrrv lhn "l"nber ol titled poisons in this Kingdom, at on a system of robbery and swindling. Few jiighl the pn seli' lime, who owe their birth, station and iin pass without a bloody quarrel or ti muider, and there puriaiice lo Iho slips of royalty, are more numerous are some streets lliroilgli which one cuiiuot pass ufler uat'K wiiiioiit inucii risK. ilia very hour l arrived here, a Maltese wan statihei in tho principal square, and since then another has boon dangerously wounded. However, 1 have lived three days without acci.lent, ami i than most loreigners are awat'o ol. i'lie present court, however, stands above impeachment, discoiintenalic ing iu every way iho licentiou.tuesa and debauchery which obtain. -d under iiiost of the previous mmi- xpect tn leave in good health to-morrow lor Hey- arch, and this example has exercised a most salutary mul. I go by ihe French flt earner, mid alter punning inroii'Mi the Mvriuli niiarnniine. snail mart nt once lor Jerusalem. After nearly nix mouths in Africa, I look lorwutd with pleasure to a fresh continent. u. t. Notes of Foreign Travel, inlhiouco upon every clans of society from the throne down. The I louse of CimimniiH, which has just been d is-dved by Her Majesty, after a continuance in olhce of live years, cniitnuied some men of decided merit; amongst whom may be mentioned Lord John liusscll, (the best man in the nation,) Lord !'alnierton. D'l. rueli, Kir .lames (iraham, Cohdeii, Walpolo, Hume. Most of the good members will be returned at the now election next week. It is expected, however, Sketches in the House of Lords. London, July 3, 18.V2. The r mail; of Mr. Dickens when bo was first in lin ed to the American House ol Representatives. that he was not greatly overpowered by the dinliu- that enough now members will bo elected to make the gnished appearance of its members," will certainly np- Hoimo overwhelmingly tree trade, mid then Ihe Derby ply with HK-reaied force, to the Itiiiish House o Lmds. ministry will go out and the reform aiiaUun will com. This will not be a muter of astouishmeut, however, I meiice with an intensity never betoio witnessed on hen it is remembered thai it is a hereditary body ol this island. noblei, not an eleci ive body ; nmt moreover, ibat the An a whole, the speakers in the British rarliamnnt lays of chivalry of manliness are passed; that these bear no cooipminnii to the speakers of Ilm American liiuiilie i have so rigidly adhered to the ancient ncloins Congress iu point nf oratory. Mr. (.'lay, Mr. W ehster, of marrying enual blood seldom permit ling a foreign or Mr. Cor in. would produce an ellect, if they could toss, and as is ihe cane, necessarily, frequently inter- be heard in the British Parliament, such as those ha mingling near blood; and further, that they live for riever witiieised bi fme. TheMt I'ailiameiitary speak-Ihe most part, a very arlilicial life, as far away from ers betray no emotiiui ; they do not deal in the tropes, nature as possible, and iu daily violation of Ihe organ- ligures anil hold comparisons of tho Auiuiicuu orator, tc laws of the body corporeal, and it is ea-ily under w hich oxcilo an tuidilorV feelings to tho highest pitch, stnml, that they cannot ben race of either vigorous but slick directly to the text, use good language and bodied, or vigorous minded men. The tirst wcw of good .judgment, but passionless, prosy, and nionoto the House ol l.nrds, Tidy verifies these observations, nous. The most obji'dioiiable future is their " mall' and a fuilher attendance upon its sittings, does not in nerisms," of which it scums impossible for them to validate thetr truthfulneis. It is to be regretted, in- free themselves; they have none of that impetuous deed, that there are many, when ilm responsibility of freedom of style ol the American orator, which ox their station is taken into account, who woii'd proper- hibits it-telf iu startling ejaculations, direct appeals to ly be classed as imbeciles. Then agnin, as a matter ol the loelings, the nwinging ol arms, and the contortions necessity, there is a Inrire niltuberuf vmini; men mere of the couuleuanco. Ami withal, they carry " P-irlia- six months. iNothmg is loo sacreit tn eseapo tlie vanity Hiyttl ,y t1(.jr fntl(r.' t.ftry demise, inherit ihe ineiitary " dec.ru n tea disagreeablo extent. During ill tlio iiame-ctiliers. r , . ... . Jllipnilllllll, (.. w....lr-u... I... I....... ...i i u.iirP win mm rriiiniiin nu r ,. ,. , ,. . ,. , ... ...lit. i-n i- .11 1 of winter travel Kvi-n tho itaid Oriotilalijiin of the i"iou unci uisnipauoii wt icu are inrown uronim inem, upon uio oeoaics 01 i ariiauieui, ue uns uearu nut one Idur inhabitants, who still look with Imm-st horror are rendered incoiiipeteut to tulhl the duties ol legis- hurt ol teeiing.aiul ttiat was Irom lirougbain; and he 011 the narrow-hrecclied Arab soldiers uud policemen, Uii.rs, in a mighty kingiloin like Great Britain, where felt nn if ho woiiUI have 11 aid something to have heard was siartleil Irom its propriety liy me uuprecein nicu Bt,.ii,ath o of the lirsl order is essential lo the tuail- a centum) " tiassiu-.-ut-anns," as the word is under- irropuon o .00 rno m - " 1 ,l:,,,rn0llt of its eo.m.licated idf.irs. Mo there are but a ond let the tiusiness id' the I louse of Lords ; uud al intigh the House contain no l'ilt, or Fox, or Burke. or Canning, yet (hero are a lew men deserving espo al notice. Foremost amongst tbeso as slatesuieii and speakers, political. ORAVE MATTERS, worth v thk .ikiuoijs attintion of tiik pkopi.koc oiiio. CIIAl'TKIt III. dred. Tho Viro Consul, who is a Syrian, was nih driven to distraction by having forty-seven impatient Occidentals on his hands atone time, nil warning to leave the next day, mid each di'Mriug to be attended to before alt iho others. The hotels were crowded, dratmiiion were nt uu enormous premium, nml every dahabiyeh that came down the Nile wiis ciunged tor st mil at home, ii is not generally productive of evil, because tho mind requires vartrty of excitement to keep it bright and active, a second voyage he..ro it b id been two hours al Boil- may bo im-mi. med the Karl of Derby, Lord Lyndluirsl, Campbell add Brougham, Iho Karl of St. Germans' and Sir John Sugden. The Karl of Derby, now 1'iime Minister, formerly lend Stanley, is (he leader of the House ot l.urds, a scholar of (be fu st order, a ready debater, and always listened to with deep interest, but he is without indu- m o, because of his ultra notions. Ink, Indeed, 1 was lold that domestic servants, and donkey. boys eien, who h id a tolerable sinatlertu:; ol any European lau'iae, were laaen iisiiingiiiuen ; mm a good bumuess itew made of it. Mn toy wny down Ihe Nile, I was rivaled with stories ot the stilus gotten Irom credulous Americans ami iinioceiit hnhtimen( and how this one spent nil Ins money ad paid enor mous commissions lo Copt merchants ..r adducing (l .,rmm , n Binli h(raight, genteel looking man, 11..11 a lew poum.s.wni e a,,, ner so,.i ,..s cum -s ... (f f . o(k ( a.istocnt at I heard of an Kuelishu.an who spent nearly f.'.IMiri for rao.cm.y wr-o.g o.. ...e gre. pn.gr. the voyage to Aboii-Sunblu and back, and another tn.iveliients nl Ihe ilay. Asa Mininter, ho d.-es not pos- II. e rontiileiieo ot l.ioie that) one tilth ol the peir plo nf Knglaud. ami will be compelled Iu resign before ihe cud id' ihe year. Thanks lo the Dispenser ot all great and good events, lit-'ht is breaking upon the nniiilri o the C lie, I Mi people, and limy are heginiiing to understand that the word "progression incmis some- thiol I.oul Brougham is still die best speaker in the British Parliament, posvessiug in bis style, more uf the Ameri can lire and animation, thai, any other member, mid it is this which has rontiibuteil most iu gaining for Inn the reputation, nt homo, of being eccentric; and ntric' he is, it the word he socoiistrii"d as to mean din whose bill for fowls, miik and other necessities bv the way wns $..011. Il is no wonder that Arabs get school ed in imposition, when lliev Hud such easy victims Tho whole journey of twit mouths. In Almu-Simhle and h ick, need not cost umre than f 100 for one person, or $ HH) lor two, including the dragoman's wages. Al the time of tnv iirrival. there were only six Am ericans in Cairo, besides inysell. Five ol them leli two days ago for Hue and Ga.a, mul the other (Mr. Har rison, id Kentucky,) joined ine lor the tour through Sylla. Al the time t lell. there were mi a uoeiurnv-eleis in all the h dels. I was the ol inhabitant of the t.uietaiid comfortable Hotel del'Kurope, to which I would recommend all persons who love nenUies, or der and civility. People were talking of the iuteune wind, so called because it blows lillv dnys. 1 found """l'1"" '"is compeers. But the great d.hVulty with the temperature rather cool than warm, nud the U tfcn, which blew occasionally, tilled the nly with dust. the tioble l.ord, no doubt is, that like most old men, he has grown excessively vain, and esteems it all impera- and iu ill is way bo has almost entirely Ueuiralied hi former all powerhil influence. Hew frequently dn it present, but wa mild ns a jtephyr, compared to iho h.rnance-hko blasts ol IheAlriciui Desert, Gentlemen prepar ed themselves for the journey across the Desert by purchasing broad -hn nunc it hats, gieeii veils, iiouiiie lined umhrellBB. and blue spectacles. These may be all very good, but I have not yet seen ilm sun or fell W(, observe (his, and huw sad a picture Ihe heat which would induce me to iiuopi mem. i would not oxebanu'e my recolb-ciions of Hie fierce red Desert, blaziiiL' all over with inieti-est lit-lit, lor any amount of green, gauy sky and blue sand. And ns for an umbrella. lh desert with a rotiMnnal had around you, is tie desert at all. Vnil I t lei the sue lay hit sceptre ou your bead, if you want lo know hi newer. I left Cairo with regret, ns 1 left Thebes and the White Nile, and evcrv other place which tiivesmiea llial be came to neck. Moreover I left behind lue my The First View of Jorusalcin. Baard Tavlor, in bis last letter puldi-tlied in the Now orlt Tribune, gives Ihe fxllowin-i ai enuut of bis lirft impressinii of ihe Holy nly : Hut when I rhtuhed the lust ritlL-o, and looked ahead wilh a nort of painful suspense, Jerusalem did not ap pear. We were ,'.inill teet ahove the Mediterranean, whoso blue we could dltinctly se (ar to the west, thiough notches iu the . bain of hills. To Iho north. he inouuimiis were gray, ilesoiate and awiul. Not a sht ub or lien relieved their trihtful barrenness. An upland tract, covered with white volcanic lock, lay tn lore us. We met peasants with asses, who looked, (to my eyes.) ns ii they h id just lelt Jerusalem. Still torwiiid we urged our horses, and reached a ruined g-iiden, surrounded with hedges ot cactus, uvr which I saw domes and walls in Ihe distance. I drew a long I l.iealh and lonked at Francois. it was jogging along without turning liii head ; he could not have I n so rent if that wa really the city. Presently we ached another slight rise iu the rocky plain. He be gan lo urge hi paining horse, and at tho same iuslant wn both lashed tho spirit into ours, dashed on nt a brenkueck gallop, round the comer of an old wall ou the lop nf tho hill, and In ! the Holy City ! Our Greek jerked both piuols Irom Ins holsters, and tired them into the air, a we reined up ou thu steep. rrom trie description ot traveler, 1 hud expected to see in Jerusalem an ordinary modern Turkish town; but that beb.ro ine, with its walls, lortrosses and domes, was it not stdl the Oily of David I saw the Jeriin ilem of the New Testament, us I had imagined ,o.ig lines nt walls crowned with a notched para pet, ami strengthened by lowers; a lew domes and spires above them; clusters of cypress hern ami there ; -this was all that was visible e the city. On eith live duty lo ho heard, upon every question winch is side the soil sloped down tn the two deep valleys over presented for itiseii-Vioti, in season or out of season, which it hnng. Ou II ad, the Mniint of Olives mwtieil with n chapel nud mosque, rise hiti ami steep, but directly over the city, the sibt fell far away upon tho lofty tiniuiilaius of Moab, beyond the Dead Sou. Tho scene was grand hi its simplicity. The prominent colors were the purple ot those dm taut mountain, and the hoary gray ol the nearer hills. The walls were uf the dull yellow ot weather-stained mar I 1. 1 ,.t.,l ll.a .,lv tra ll. ihtrlt 'viira Mini ninnlilit .lensitlg mat Some llietl IU U.e i Ko.r.. w.rrivsl 1 ln.ve biked down umn. Ihe to see the IniiUy "I poor human nature draw a veil ol obscurity over the bright escutcheon of a name that would oiherw.se have been rendered immortal. It would seem to be a pmvidencenf God, are taken Irom the scene of actum, ,.jlv rn,m (no Mount ot Olives, and up toil Inun the in the zenith of their glory, lest iliey might jeopardize valley ol Jehosapliat; but I cannot restore Mm illusions their reputation, bv nine iiiii"uarded act. or iiiiudioiotis I "1 iho lirsl view, linn nf conduct. ,ord l.yudliurst has long stood in the foremost rank faithful dragoman, Achiuel. He had found a new sou I ,,f British statesmen, and is yet found taking nil active in his home, bin ah invalid wile, wtm .lemanuoii M(irt i( debate. . i,po. lance, but bo is now Very ins r!1re, aim so ,,e ns , ,, , g.w, ' r ,,, ,, rilmlv d.-clining. in n. t.v h.s elmsant devotion, his activity. Nir John Sugde,,, iho Lord Chancellor, is said lo b esty sad int.-Hij-erice, mid I had always treated him the clenrest hesib .l lawyer, nnd Ihe most popular man rather as a Iricict iiian a servant, i neiievn no reauy who ti is sat niton ine wooi-saca since ine days nt t;ar- Wo allowed our horses to walk slowly down the re- luainiiiii half mile hi ihe J ntl'a gnte. An Kiigllshman. with a red silk shawl over tils head, was sketching the itv, while nn Arab held nn umbrella over htm. In ide the sale we stumbled upon an Dalian shop will. all Italian sign, mid alter threading a number ot iiitn- ate nassaiies under dark archwav, and being turned oil iron, one hotel which waybill ol travelers, reached another, kept by a converted German Jew, where we loiind Dr. Kobinson and Mr. My Menu, wim nmu nr- loved me, for he turned pale under lh darkness ol his I j(mi Wolsey, not excepting l.ord l.yndhiirnl, Broiigh- rived yesterday. Il ounds strangn to talk ot a Imlel am or Truro This otlice statuU next tho crown in rank, and curi- skiti, when we parted at Itoiilak. For the hrst time ill live mnlilhs. felt Inst ami lonely. Mr. MrOailley mir nnnmil CiHinrul whs kinil I'lHiltl'li tn indorse in cerlilicateuf n-commeiidaiion, and I am sure that in. ens enough, is the only ollice of importance in Ihe American win. engages Achmet tiaidi will be diimp- British empire, open to merit alone. And upon this pointed. I little bit of republicanism, the British people pique uir. ici,a..iey .o.u ... . , i i . i , it V u ll I ibenicelves terribly. Its eligibility, however, require had a pleasant ,,,-nage a far as Atb h. which wereach- pre-appoi...melit by the crown to the peerage. The ed alter dark, me uein wa crowneti won snn -.j .(..- ........... in Jerusalem, but the world is progressing, and there nre already three, Irish Troubles, The Dublin Nation, a leading Irish Itoiiinn Catholic journal, thus auuouncea the news of the recent riot at Storkporl, under tlio hetd nt "Hell broke loose; "I he demon nf intolerance is up in Knglahd. 11 Bloodshed, sacrilege and arson inaugurate the open merchants on their way to the great fair of tho Kbekh hy niher limn rum blood or a peer, if it be only of lP " rt""n '""""I"' , , , 0-...1 i i T....t.. i.. d... n.ih. Timrti . i . . " The atrocities committed at Stockport have neve Z7h W I...1.I . ,rv v,;'r. m hnuor ! ihb M'.n- ' " ' '" hm, ,ur, ,1 in tl w.l.l.-.unllmv.k ..I .1,. - ' . ..... I 111 ill Uh.I Miff 1,11 Mini I'lllllllM'lnil U'll.l t.lla tlllli ft I ...... Il in. u uiiiula 111.. I .it Ul... I.,., i, , . l Ii. I..... U n !...( Ilm nr.,iil.. ill I.i.lltl IS 111 milt IiiIIF I .... n , - """J " '.. ,nm months from this lime. Ii is not unusual for two bun- which may be mentioned paunnt, as n cnnsolnlory ph-h' tho revival ol ihe bloody era of perwciition. This is not lite casual explosion of mob license. is the work id' Protestant rulers. They furnished Ihe incentives. I hey drew the sword anil thiealeiied tin lh"inselves on benches and chairs, and give ll.e.r bod-1 les into the pnwcr of A r ib liens, which are the Bedoii-1 inn of the tl-'ii tribe, lank, vortcinus and iusnliable. It was nine o'clock Ihe next moriiillir when wo n-achei Alexandria. The far for iho trip is l... including pan- sable meals. Thu steamers leave both cities every live i i ,i i. b-..,,,,!,!..,! 'r,.i. .i,il ..;,. ,.f :..r i.. -.....i.ii.. a i . ' I hmgs Ihe most sacred have been pmlaheil ti... .LiA1 I..P I ii, in ilnuiiia uml aiieli I ..... - . .... i (' hrisl illll Ti'lllpln has l.eetl sac k ed nnd detllol i-hed ii mnii. no in-. T.n- ....... .. - (,r , Wll whenever n minisrry noes oui, 1110 i.oni , , ... ,i o , 1. ..f ....... L.. i.ld. ., .rB. iiii..b . . HI.U nm ui uiiimiMM-i uii- iii.it n.u innii-iii. in isT. Llllllllll.il lllinni nil'- kuii.i""" l mii I--I-- - ,11... .,ll. .......,, ..I.,, nl., I l I ..,. in . 1UVI , .1 . I. . I 11 I . .. . . , .1... ,l,. hri.k whl i ,lrivo it iiwiiv. Hut wo " " ' s " " "V il.-n..U"n. in- n.Hiy .in ii.i.i i.i ui.. iw.or, vi.ii.iwi - ' . i . ri'-.iiiio i k. nnin . ....r . ....n v .... ...i 11... ...... 1 1 . -r .1...... -II t-.. I- .. V....t ....I l...l....nluK- l.,r 1 l"'ili"n i ,'"", nii-ni 'J ..,' "i n j-m, nm. ..... i lml wmn 'I'll iin- ii KOI nn "I ui"Ol ! ni mii-sji-.jin, n.i m. j - - , . . . i ii I."- .A' n,. i r...m.iuin:. nm i i til I liecei.lt er. f. ion itiiL'rt L'llic in tiilsuiess nl A " MU Men openeo nun noicueiiroriil armies ni ueiuii wan nut groat. I he steamer did nol pass udo the Man lawyer, I hero arn now six gentlemen living, Who " r moiidteli Caiuil, hut we were uaiiMerreu 10 a son i liavo bad a wat on lhn wniilsiirlt, nil men ol niiuicioe catial-boat, dra.vn by A sieaui ing. mere were no I lor u-liii h Ihev do nosilivelv tinllnnt' ' And this is not l.r nt them to check iheir mvrmiibuis, who can say all ; public men of all kinds, clerks, and even servanls, -'""'t eo iho fires ol Smiililield blau.g for uii.l l.r n...isi....e.l ..Il in ll.i.wv. Lr.. I'"'""'"' " ..'J'"" 8,""","K ' ... wnli Popish victims heinre the year wauesr salaries, mid are thus enabled in ine a life of idleness. . . J rlnri benreparcd. Let her link her siren: i d i ti, ,,flPu l ,.H,.Wle,l ili.. c.mi. 'I ""'y clioiisi. Il ts one oi ine iiiosi atioiiiiuaiile sys- amuml tho sanctunry. 1 his is tin tune lor cabal mid ' 3 1 .-. J . :i . i : i I .1... ...... ..I. i. !.....! i knv ii,. i4.r .... nt nnd I i nl.-rime bin lend. Ii. tbo llliliio ot ndluiotl mid roiili. IMinV lUOSV CPUp eiMM l.liM.n inuinn. I uu .iiin.ro.i - - j o . L-ci rapidlv. Tho teiitsof the engineers are pitched it is dillleiilt in an enli-hteimd nnlio.i like this, to find ry. b-t I n (m.IioIu s ol Ireland ronlederaie and pre- l....a,..Mn do. ,,Uee -ml Atleh. and laborers .... ,.r -.,,1, I,.. - ",""r "Heresis siUK lllli. Ilis.gll.hca.ice Oe , , l i ..,.. 'i'i... ,.i.i ,mr. B ' 1 tore the shadow ol Iho coming persecution, are aireaoy w-'i-hn.i Mif! ; " laboriuL' c asses, main whom taxes bear must heavily. Mi.,r.,. m l.-n.t ilu.v -le.ll iiilni-'it nn lal.er.inc .nil- . n..w beo.e wo. It. rt iieuiu for the bri.lues and 'r'w rtt,ct "f "Irl' ' m,,cn nutn ,My ' V' w"'"1"1 n '""'bh reinlanee. They shall not strike ut n "I i i... I I. I u Cut I r .... il,. f :ul ..v.-xiil nvnr Ilm rnrnse ol a l.iitiou ..7... ' .....;.!... .i : . . r . i ... w .... v.. -i. ..... i oi H. re is an index to the tWlimr which recent events settled. Abbas Pash.i persists in rel.mng ihe Tnzi- nwli ,' ,l iiin. ' bave stirred up among the lloman Catholic populalh... . . : .,i-,i.u,.l h il.ni I.., iv ill bnauo. 1 , ,jn nm,,,, doiniiitnlis. 1 1 atlterede.iis ill ine p: mni, nun ... ,! , A cnMi oceiirred recehtlv. lor the truth ol w hicn tne ..i .i. lv.i. T..I.,- at.it .....I ilm Ui......i' .... ...I I.- il. ......... ....ij.ai.1 K.nii mi. I in Mil 111 ib..i,..i ill" ilk. I.--.H-... i. .....n .. ..." , . f. u. ,..,.ii...L.. i i..i v... wilier can vouch, having recived the statement Irom proclamation, forbiddini; the public celebration roiauoii ui'iwi'pu r,gv p. niiii . iiir j - i ' .... i .1 . . ..i.i;.. i.,..l.u,. i... ... ..it. ... ..... I t atiiin.it it nis ni ine on r ilea coiii'eriii ii. w o n n i i imnt imii-iin nn." i u iuii i. niin " ii" i..,;." , . even l. mi"" 'in- ii niuiiii j unmu. it. - m "'... p.. i . - . .. ...:.i., i ..... I....I : .i... mi.. ,r e,,.,,. iv . ;n...r..wii,l nr.i'ti.'n wiiicu may now he aided nm iteciara'ion, in uu MV U IIK' ""'i-'Mlir uu...- lll"ir -l' " " """ " ""I " " . .- .. .11 .1 i a . -..I..- Al.n... Pu.l.,1 ! nn. ii ms ih.in ni eh! v I t i . i iii '...lu,r "peecii iron, ine inrone, ' 10 iipimui inn 1 niifsiiiiu m iiiiieiniii i. - . I wns noniism 11, nun erni cn-rivs, ns in 11 Mini, s-.n (i, , 1 .i,... i,.; ,i , liberty which ts the natural result.' Tlm storm hai ong been githering, and it looks an H the uuinreax bigoted, sell'Hh and debased as oyer held power, ami (. ( (i.r ( pp1Jl,tir w,irb wa m y(inr( lUegoverumcn. o ' I - " (1, ,,,' their salary.) but being in 1 ioi. wrioKi revenue of 17,fuo 01)11 out uf a n,.piilaii..ii ol of certain important iiiloriimlioti connected with their Sto, kp.rt was but the hemld of troubles nf a still anmo lour or five uulhnua, ho squander enormous sums I deparlnmnl, anil I bus holding an ndvni.tageel the Gov .... ..1. 1 . ....1 l.ia .;.. avilinir ilm filW intMl I . .1 1 I I ... I li dM rUn the other, like dennm-.-N. K. trong party at Coostantinople iu favor tf deposing him yra oi age, and will, without doubt, engago in oilier txprtti. The Publio Printing. The framecs of ihe new constitution saw fit to incorporate in it a clause, that all the public printing tor the State of Ohio, including the printing ol bills, documents, journals, volume of laws, blanks, X-c, should bo lot by contract to the lowest bidder. The clailvj reads an follows: "The printing ol the laws and journals, bills, legislative documents uud paners for each brunch ol the General Assembly, with the printing required by the rjxecuuve nna oinnr departments ol Ntalo, shall be let hy contract to the lowest responsible bidder, by such executive oHicers, and in such manner as shall bo itre- scribed by law." Sec. 2, Art. 15. Tho reader will perceive that this is positive, une-tpiivncal, and admits of no evasion. Not a single item of the printing could he done constitutionally, by the Legislature last winter, except iu this maimer. About this, there can be no doubt in the mind of any man who has capacity tn comprehend ihe simplest proposition. Soon niter Ihe election, lint fall, nnd when it was as. ertaincd that there was a largo Locofoco majority in both brunches, it was rumored, and very generally bo mveU, that the editor ol the Ohio Stiitammi waa in in: live correspond' with (be leading men of his rfiity lor Iho purpose (,f securing tke entire printing of both Home for the srmon, without any competition. We have nn positive evidence that this rutnnr was true, further than a knowledge of tlio fact, that he finally ancceeded in accomplishing Ihii object! By reference to the clause in the constitution, it will ho seen that the printing was to be lot out by such of doers nf Statu, and in such manner us should bo lire ribud by law. As there was no law uu the subject, it became necessary for thu Legislature, if they desired to pay oven u decent reaped to the commands of ilia' new instrument, and tho sanctity uf the oath they had taken to support it, to provide, at once, for thu public printing, iu accordance with thu positive commands id' the constitution. No inun uf sense will pretend that a kV time was not ample to pans a law for the pur pose id this compliance. If, fur luluro use, it was thought necessary to guard this subject more carefully, and to digest its delails morn elaborately than could be done, then u law for future use could have been adopt-ed alter more mature deliberation. These uro tho views which honest, common sense, law and consiiui-lion abiding men would at once avow Let us le w see what was done by ihe Legislature: On Monday, January 5th, both Houses of the new Legislature met in Columbus. The members were duly called and each look u solemn oath to support tho constitution of the State of Ohio. In the House, we think uu tho lirst day nf tho session, Mr. Buss, a Locofoco member, introduced a resolution authorizing the Clerk ol the House, (M. 11. Mkimhy, brother to Samukl Mi daht.) to procure such printing done iu nkotild be ordered by the Home, the rate of compensation for which, should be Iho same an the saiuo clnssol printing should be taken at by the lowest responsible bidder under the law in be passed for that purpose. This resolution was adopted. It was reasonable n" a temporary measure. I wasu compliance intpirit with the constitution. Such printing as was indispensably neci'ssary before the law could bo passed would be done, and the payment should be at the sauiu rates that wero to be paid to Iho successful bidder for that class nf work. On Thursday of that week, it was found that Mkpa-h t was not willing In take the work on that condition, nud a nioti.-n to rccomider the resolution was made, so that the obnoxious clause deliniug the amount of payment might bo stricken out. Here was the first exhi bition of the cloven foot. Hero was the first patent net in the House w hich showed a determination to tram ple under foot not only the letter, but Iho spirit of the now coiiNlitutioti. Wo wi-re at nneo applied to by members, lo know if wn would do tbo House printing on these terms. We replied promptly that icewonld, and we gave it written statement to that ettect, which was read lo the House bv Mr. Siin.LAiiAltutn, of Clark. But, it wan of no avail. Tho majority had determined that Miniur slmuld hnvo the printug, not only without competition, but apaintt the ejcprcut spirit of ihe lotisiiluiioii. So, the original resolution was reconsidered. I his clause obliging mm o intco wuui others would bid to do ihe work for, was stricken out, and limn, after it was fixed to suit I hem, it wa again passed. So much for the opening act in the House. In tbo Senate, the notorious and niccrupuluUH Ciuui.ks B. Fi.oon, wns elected Cb ik. A resolution wan introduced bui homing him lo contract fur the we-1 ceMiary printing ftr the Senate, at price not higher than thotepaid by the Senate hit year. Inasmuch an the Sen- prmlliig was done, last year, under the lowest Idd, the violation of tho spirit of Ihe cotmiitutioii was not palpable as it was in Ihe House. Of cntir-o Fi oon took the work to the Statetman office, as every body peel eil. Having all this fixed according lo previous arrange ment, matters went on swimmingly for some Weeks. The committee on Printing, in Ihe two lloii.tea, took p tho l.usiiieis with great moderation, ami mado ho jHirt tor several weeks. Meanwhile the fact leaked nut thai both M. II. Mk- uary ami Cmaiu kt Fi.iaui had contracted with Mk-lurtr not only for the neceuary printing, but bad also bargained for printing tho Journal of the two I tauten. Thero was an assumption ol power ol a gross nud moat outrageous character. Remember tho House had directed their Clerk In procure such printing an the. lloHte thould order, no more. But iu violation ol this, ho contracted lor printing tho Journal, nt high rates, without the shadow of au'horiiy to do so. This was ton bare faced a piece of corruption to gn unrtl Imko I. A large number of the Locofoco members were unwilling to stand up and face that sort of music. They must repudiate that act, or expect to lm repudiated themselves. A resolution, calling nn M. II. Mr part for informa tion, elicited the fact that ho had ngreed with his brother for printing the Journal of ihe House. Mr. Casau then introduced a resolution, assorting that this contract with Mkhabt for printing the Journal, was wholly uuaulhoried by the House, nnd was void, and lirected their Clerk lo utility Samuel Medary of their b'cision. After a stormy debate, this resolution patted by a decided majority. The people of the State have not yet forgotten the rnss and outrageous conduct of Mhakt ill attacking A personally abusing Caah, because ho had dared to inirodiico such a resolution Wo have had nn in stance of rnfli inism so disgraceful for years. There wan a most galling vole of neimure, not only on Samukt. McbAitr, but more especially on M. H. M. nAnr, for his conduct. It was frit, but was mi more than be de served. The next day CuiHi. r WKi.t.En moved lo mvHMi'iVr this stinging vote ol consul o, but the House refused to to so, and laid tho motion to rrcon.tiWer.on the tabl where ii remained till the end of tlm session. But, in spite of thin rebuke, in npile ol the passage of this re ution, which v' reanniu in lull lorce, Samu. i. Mk nnr hns proceeded, in direct defiance nf tho Mouse, to print the Journals, nnd we know that they have been liiibhed at that olhce. It is well enough lor the people tn understand thai by this net of lawlessness, ihey will bo compelled pay a much larger sum from iho Treasury than they would have ib.ne it this wot k had been given out lo the lowest bidder, under tbo law. But what tin the manager of ihat concern earn for the tax payers or the rotisiiiutioii when Ihey stand In their wny to pub. lie plunder! I In the Senate, Fi.eon's nulhority gave him tbo right to contract for lliesitTwiry printing, ami, under this he made a bargain fnrprintiug the Senate journals. Kvery man knows that Ihi" was not nectttary printing, nt that llmn. It should have been done by lhn lowest bidder, under the taw. Hi hi"lructinii gave him the right to procure the priming f bills, and reports that worn wanted for iinniediaifl " But the Senate never ordered this contract le lm rescinded, and under it Mk-dart has primed the j"rnals of tho Senate. Thus it will be seen that mni wero so managed, as to give the entire printing of b" "essoin, with the single ex-caption of tbo laws, into Mudary's bands, not only without law, but against the express commands of the Constitution. Let us now see whit speed the Legislnturo made in passing a law tn carry ounni provision about printing. After some weeks delay, Iho House roinmilten report ed a bill nnd linally p"ed U. The bill went ti the Senate, and there met tlm docidinl hostility ul one JW infill, who ha pjiened to be chairman rmjprinting, in that body. Mungen bud drawn up a bill, and of course he thought his buiilling inoih more respectable than mil which came from the Hoiitn, He moved lo strife out the House bill, and insert his own, and, ultersoim weeks delay, and soint. debate, this wna done by tin Senate. Tin new bill was sent to the House, and that body, by dome strouge fieak, still thought that their bill was the best, and they refused to concur in ihe Senate nmeiiibuetit. lore waa a nice chance for siiutindoriti" time. Tlm bill was iu just the fix the Loco fc cos desired. It was hung up between the two Houses, and, in the meantime Medary was very cou.fortublu doing all the woik! Three months had passed, and nothing was accomplished. It was not till near tho close of the session that a sort of compromise was effected, nud the bill that is now a law, was passed. But its friends were very careful that it should not pass in time " ,nUv -'Ii,lt upon any of the work ' the, past session. The entire priming of both bodies has thus been thown without competition, uud against the requirements of the con stitution, into the Statetman t hands. Mkoaht accom ilished his object, but at the expense of many tho. tandt of dollart to the tax payers of the State. He bus demonstrated what not only foes, but fricn ds know tn bo a truth, that, when cupidity demands it, neither law or constitution m. any restraining force upi n him. i here are several matters worthy of serious reflec- 'ion to the people of the State, in view of this history. It is notorious that tho printing ns it ha been managed has cost taoeml thmtamd dollart more than it vVeutdhnve cost the State, if our proposition had been taken, or if a law had been passed putting Ihe work tn the lowest bidder. These thousands of dollars co into the pocket fan unscrupulous partian. If it had been fairly, lohcfllly and legally done, we tdinuhl have boon saved the labor of this exposure. But it has been done by thu most palpable fraud, tho mnt barefaced, impudent assumption, that has ever been witnessed in Ohio. When there is complaint about high taxes, let the vo ters remember that several thousands of their money went to pay o'lhat concern ! Again, the total disregard of the requirements of the constitution, is a signilicant fact in the comiuouccmorit il their career under that instrument. W ill any body contend that ult this work was done legally 1 Docs any body believe, that any other than partizan teehtigs kept the printing bill back to the last of the session We present these faett f.r iho consideration of ihe people of tho Stale. They have a moral that cannot bo misunderstood. It is for Ihe jnp!e to upply the remedy for such open, palpable nud niitrageoua viola tions of duly and uf right. HAMILTON COUNTY HARMONY REEMELIN ON JUDGK WARDEN. The polilic;il cauldron boils and seotht's in Hamilton county. It in nut a war between Whigs and Locofocus, but among the Locnfocon thuinselvcs. It has raged with great violence for weeks, and is yet the topic that fills the Locofnco papers. The Inst Cincinnati Kn'uirer, has an article written by CtiAitt ks Kkkmki.in, nnd uddresscd to Judge Waii iikn, of the Citizen. Il is bitter ami severe. Wo give soitio concluding paragraphs, to show the spirit of the quarrel. Thus, Mr. Warden, you stand convicted before the world, of Iho character 1 gave you convicted by your own showing and your own admiisious. lotl knowingly and basely lied, when you charged me wilh being a bigot. Voti lied, when ymi charged ine with being u disturber of the peace of the Democratic party. Von lied, when voil revamped the old falsehood about my court house speech. i mi lied when ymi charged mo wilh writing antl- Catholic letters from Kurope; ami ou lied, lastly, about my lute speech in Uoiumbus. Am I loo bard on von T Nn ! Dn I use too harsh language T No ! I do but say what every honest man has said already ! may be silent when party mends, or who at least should bo friends, stab tne iu the dark. 1 may be silent when a pack of politicians are repaying me lor a lon-r and disinterested, faithful and active service to the Democratic party during IS yeais. by the baiett ingratitude. I may be in lent when hrctid uud butter politicians assail ine, who are leveling iu the harvest which the seed they nt least did not sow iu "Mi, has brought forth. 1 will bo hilent, even if the party should be made lo record publicly the secret cabuls ol my enemies, nod when defamation shall have done its woik, under all this I rhall bide my lime, relying upon justice in ilm end; but when a blink hearted bigot assails my private character; when, in this laud of freedom, be dares arraign before a tribunal that fins pre-judged me, my rcligmu views, iheu I meet such wretch Willi Ihe language ami the rebuke uu de serves. It js high lime that such as be, who, with harmony ou their bps, " Kiss but to betray, iiuld be made in feel thai Protestants and Catholics ed none of Ids puny clfort. Tho Catholics hav ler defenders, and more skillful pilots, and they, ihe great mass nl Ihein, including, unless 1 am much mistaken, the bead nl that church uud its clergy, repudiate the self constituted pacifier. " et mo nay tn him in conclusion, that he is wofully mistaken in my religious sentiments. Let him next time impure lirsl and then nccuse, nud il inuv save him the thankless lnk nf painting characters which are ptnlly lalse, whether treated as hchous nr us lads. " May lie repent and sin no more." I nssnre him, I feel for him, as I part with him, nnthiiig but pity- pity, that so little a m mi should be tiler Itiall I my sell supposed. C. It K I'M KLIN SOUND AMERICAN DOCTRINELETTER FROM UEN. COMBS. When the Whiff Central Committee deter mined tn call a Muss Convention ut Columbus on the 'IM hist., the Secretary address, d letters to several em itient gentlemen in other States, inviting thorn to be with us on that occasion. Among others, an invitation was sunt to Ilou. Lkslik Comhs, of Kentucky. Iu response to that invi atiou, we received the following lettor from thnt distinguished Kentuckian. Il is an able, dignified, and convincing document, and is worthy of special consideration by tho American people. To us of the West it appeals with peculiar forco, in view of the great interests involved, and tho known, and openly avowed hostililv f air. 1'uhck to ihe ays-tem of the imr-. emeiit of Western rivers and harburs. We commend this letter to the attention of the peo pie of Ohio. It was received a'ter tho session of tho Convention: LtTTI.E Compton, R. I,, July lb'. W. T. Uascum. Esq. Dear Sir! Your letter of the fdh iust. has been forwarded to me from Lexington, Kentucky, inviting rue to visit Columbus, on the 'liml, mid address tho Whig Mass Convention. The situation uf my family, at this time, will prevent my doing so, or short us is the notice, so deeply impressed am I, with the importance of ihe occasion, that I would certainly corno and ndd my mite of influence to the largo amount, which I doubt tint, will bo then and there concentrated, for the public good. Never before, in my time, bus an election been pending fraught with such vast consequences to the prosperity and happiness of the American people never one in which the great valley of the Mississippi, especially, from the northern lakes to the gulf uf Mexico, Was so vitally interested. From the time of Gen. Washington up tn 181(1, the principle of proUction to American labor, was generully sanctioned in our system of revenue, by discriminating duties, nml even Polk and Dallas were elected by fraudulently hoisting the Tariff Hag of lit 12 to the mast head. Now, tor the first time, tho black Brititk ling of free trado, is boldly hung out, mid the past history of iho Standard Di'arcrtui ihe Locofoco Democracy, ahneiubled in convention, at Baltimore, proves them to be worthy nl'ihepositioiius.signed lliem. Now, for the first time, tu our history, do wo witness the startling fact, of the Knglish I'n ss, headed by the London Timet, the most potent daily paper ill the world, taking widen in our party contest, impudently allempt ing to dictate to American freemen. They go lur Pierce ami King, against Scott and (ha ham. Sh 'II wo submit f Shall wo give up what our Revolutionary hdhers fought and died lor, nnd gloriously wrested from the haughty king of Foighud, or by bold, united resistance, maintain our denr-boiight liberties ? Trusting in Providence mid a good cause, I am for battle now mid forever not doubting that our appeal to the patriotism and intelligence of the people, will prove triumphantly successful. Again, if fierce and King bo elected, farewell fo. ever, to all itnpmvenients of the harbors upon our great lades, nml tho navigation of our rivers, Milliin s lipid) millioiitfjwill annually be taxed upon ihe swear of our faces, to regulate and protect foreign conimerco. Not a dollar to facilitate conimerco among the interior States, Salt water traffic wilt ho decided tu bo constitutional, hut fresh water repudiated, as dangerous to State rights, ami violativeof theresoliilioiisof '9S, '9!) I! and the Democratic Biilnmore Platform I!! W ill Ohio, thus help to dislraucliise hersell T Agree to pay taxes forever to support a system of policy so ruinous to all her interests T II n til the deed is done, I will never believe it. Would tn God, I had a Voice loud enough to be heard from end to end, from side to side, i f her broad fertile lietds, I would wake up her husbandmen and laborers every where, In ns-ert and maintain their rightF. To demand, that as ihey have an equal share .f the burdens of the United Slates Government, ihey i i i i i . nun unii i uow on, iii ounce in me uummii it nr- u ,lm l r,r.M, ,.,l ,.,y an o.Ul purl,",, ..f .1. la-.Hit. c,ip- ,, ; jHljc, lu J.y kMi ,, IMm, Uim The Scott Democracy, lhn editor of iho Cleveland tore t City receives heeriug advices from Mahoning, Columbiana, Wavm1 l KichlHiid counties, the Democracy are breaking loose from iheir sellish leader, and g'.ing over by ozena to the reoplo s cuudldate. It is eoiili.leiilly bo lieved that in these counties Ihe iMiial Locolnco major ity will be cut down fully one half. Hero are a few items irom lhn " inral districts : A Irieiiil in Mahoning county, "ending us a third instalment nt subscribers, says : ' huctosed is $.1 lor the Campaign torett Vtly. rime ol the ten sulicribersare, ir rather have been Uemocratt. ihey now all an b.r tt. 1 lus will make inriy names l have sent you There are only four Whigs among them. Thistown ship given about six to one lor the Democrnlio ticket, but my candid opinion is that Gen. Scott will have a iuiiriiy iu it. ' 1 lie Legislature ol last winter cured our Democrats, d to run such a man tm Pierce against Geii. Scull, is not only nbsurd but a sin. Next week you may 1 r twenty nm re nhrrih'rrt, nnd a 1 bill with them.1 We received, last week, n largo list from one of the strongest Democintic townships in Columbiana. the writer ol the letter remarks Unit the usual Wiwa vole ut that township does not exceed b.'i to 711, Hiatal leant illll voles will tin polled lor Gcu- Scott, and adds: ' You have now 17 Democratic subscribers in this township nil for Old Lutnly's Lane.' Our heaviest club is hi Richland cuuiiiy. H num bers about Hit Campaign W eeklies, many of which are taken by men wtm, heretotoro, always voted llie nluim Democratic ticket. Our agent nt that point sajn Unit the skies are brightening, and the dark clouds nl Lo- cofocoisin are breaking away, nnd that all honest meti, without respect In pai ty, have declared lor the second w asinngton.' A postscript to a letter Irom Wayne, containing the names of .V. subscribers, say: " Ibis township will liive Gen. Scott Ml morn votes than were ever polled lorn Whig candidate before. The township east ol ours will give n S.-oit majority no W hig ever carried il before.' Il may be well lo remark in this connection that all these advices come directly and Ireshly from llie larui- iug di-li lets, w here court house clique inllueuces ate hut little felt, and w hero men obey llie hon-sl, sincere dictates ui their hearts and luiiijt i. ve nave re ceived not less than lifty loiters w ithin a fortnight from the rural districts, containing about l.t" new sniisen. hers for tlio Weekly Forest City, in Irmu twelve to lif teen counties: each of which oive the same testimony, that Gen. Scott will get large nb-rs ut voles hero- tul'.re cast lor tbo Locnlnco ticket. The same reasons are invariably given for tips change nf poll ieal sonli nieiit and action, viz: The iiiUmotin conduct of the last Locofoco Legislature: lb- iinisMMhV " ot Piero1 nud the Anti-American and ProS'uvety i liaracbT ot his platform, and ihe great public services nud quallli cattoli ul Hell. Scotl. I loinag. .goes may mm mm rave, but llie people are determined lo make tho I ml Hero President." General Scott in Mexico. Wo have at length a copy ol the order istued by Gen. Scott while Cimiiiunderin-Chief of tho American army in Mexico, with respect to the deportment of his soldiers in presence of the religious (Catholic) obser-vnucea of the Mexicans. We give the order entire, though part nf it has uu relation to the matter under discussion. Here it is; HkADQUA TITERS Or THE ARMY, ? Mexico, Sept. 4. 1847. $ OKNIUAI, OnDBIW-0, i!5)7. 1. Here, as iu all Roman Catholic countries, there are frequent religious processions, in the streets, aa well us in churches such aa the elevation of the host, the viaticum, &o. 2. The interruption of such processions has already-been prohibited in orders, and as no civilized person will ever wantonly do any act to hurt the relinions feel. ing nf others, it is earnestly requested of all Protei-taut Americans either to keep out of the way, or to pay to the Catholic religion and its ceremonies every decent mark of respect and deference. II. In the case of the viaticum (visits of consolation to the Sick and dying,) t,.mD.uni)Hrs of corps -r rm quested, when called upon, to allow two Roman Cath olic soldiers to perform the usuul functions on suchoccasions. 4. There is every reason to believe that a verv tarye distribution of knives and dirks has recently been m aoo io noerateu convict (thieves and murderers) tor the purpose of assassination American ulilinra fnmul drunk or otherwise otf their guard. measures urn iu progress to search out and seize or execution the instigators and leaders of these as sassins. Iu the meantime guards and patrols will search all suspicious persons, disarm, and, if necessary, 'mum nii'ui n;r uiHi aim piiiiisinneni. Hy command of Major General Scott. H.L. Scott, A. A. A.G. We shall not write one line in defence, nor even in explanation of that order. There it is; nnd if anybody sees tit to vote against Gen. Scott because of it, lot him go a bond 1 The hero canuut need such votos to elect him. Wo give a fuller nccount of Gen. 8cott'a coiirso with respect to the religion of Mexico from the pen uf an -nicer woo was wuu mm uirougnotn ins Mexican wnpuiyti. We eive this also without comment, fur none can be needed : To tke Editor of the Berkt and Schuylkill Journal: I desire to make, through Ihocolumnsaf your widely circulated paper, a brief public statement concerning Gen. Scott nud the Cuthulics in Mexico. 1 do this because the question has been asked mo an hundred times over within the last month " Did Gen. Scott order ymi hi kneel before the Catholic priest while in mexico r piuw, u waa my good fortune to follow Gen. Scott Irom his landing at Vera Cruz to the City of Mexico, and I can say in all candor mid truth, that I never heard of such an order, tier do 1 believe any Indy else ever heard of such an order, emanating from Gen. Scott. True, ho was respectful and hu mane in all that ho did or said to the Mexicans. This is stumped indelibly upon the page of history, and yon may search its records in vain lor a campaign that waa conducted wilh such unparalleled humanity as ihat iu Mexico. Soon after the battle of Cerro Gordo, be addressed " n humane and re-assuring proclamation to the Mexican people." Iu that document he tells them : "Wo have not profaned your temples, nor abused your women, nor seized your properly, as limy would have yon believe." " Wo say this with pride, and wo confirm it by your own bishops," &o. "The army of the United States respects, nnd will always respect, private property of every description, uud the pioperty of ihe Mexican Churches." " Mexicans ! the past cannot be redeemed, but the future may be provided lor. Repeatedly have I shown you ihat the Government and people of the United Slates desire peace desire your sincere friend-ship."" I am mnrching with my army upon Pnebla and Mexico, 1 dn not conceal it; from those Capitols I shall attain address you. -1 desire jieace, friendship and union. It is for you tu elect whether you prefer wnr. Under any circumstances, be assured I shall not fail in my word." Witti such peaceful and conciliatory messages did Gen. Scott address the Mexican people. And while ho did no, he asked his soldiers to act at became Ame ricans. So such humiliations as loul mouthed pnliti inns would have the peoplo believe, were ordered bv him; and I now do, in justice lo ihe Commautlnr-iu- Very truly Your most ob't servant, LKSLIK COMBS. through ihe niii.paigii, pronounce the chare a libel- I mis falsehood, and its nnilior, if not a base demagogue, a political falsifier, w hose blackened heart is destitute oi every principle ol truth and honor. The slander originated, perhaps, I'mm the fact that I Col. Child a veteran ntlirer ol the Ut Artillery did, Iwii'ie netting (inventor ol Jaiapn, order the main guard to salute the (lost ns it passed the guard house. I am tint stitVicieutly pasted up in tho ceremonies of the Ki.niish Uhurch, lo give a correct description ol the parading of the Host, As much as 1 saw, however, it was u procession that formed nt one ol tho churches. i:oiilsliig el one or two priests, hearing crones ; these by throe hoys, who earned bells, and Squandering the Publio Money. The legislation ol ihe last l ieioTal Assembly, mad up io incimilly nf uulb'dged " Deinoerals," has elicited the almost uu verbal censure of the pimple, irrespec live of paftv, lor iu injudicious nets, waste of lime. and Unprecedented extravagance. I-i.r evidence Unit this censure is not wiltjout cause. we refer our readers to the laws just published ihrmii h-out the State, by both Whig and Democratic journal. they will there see, by comparing appropriations nt were preceded that body with those uf former Legislatures, tho uu- rung them while llie procession moved, lo notify the warranted extravagance of the latter. people of their approach. The priests are followed by I he total approprinlit.ns during the sessioii o 1H:,0- single tile processions, consisting nl about thirty or lor- 1 amounted lo In this sum it w ill be re- ty, walking on either side nf the street. These nearly inhered that llie ex nei.se ot the Constitutional Con- nil carry luiitenui, (it beinff always in the nitjht) and volition were included or at least an appropriation lor as they move along the streets singing chants, the Mex that purpose of l.r,IH0 was mado. leans mvcrence it, by gettiiiff on their knees, where During Hie silling ol the last Legislature, known to Ihey remaiu uncovered until Ihe procession is nut ol be us void ol principle as that, ihe total appropriation wiidit. w lien it prua.-s a military post, I tie guard is al amounted to ifMll.KI 1 811 ! Just fl7'J,(JS(i 80 morn I ways turned nut to salute the Host. This they do hy than that o the preceding Legislature, expenses o the gelling nn their knees, and coming to a present arms ; Consiitiitioiuil Convention and all. and it was ibis, Ihat Col. Child ordered our guard lo There is, in consrquence of which, ns might be sup- do during a parade of the hosts, through the slret-ts af posed, a di tn il iii tlio treasury ol f J.o,ti7i 4b, whu h Jaiupa, aud im one mat is tuily acquainted with the tin Auditor ol ntato is authori.eu to make up out ul circumstances ol the case, will charge ihat veteran ot- tlio suroius hind. iicer oi impure motives in so urucriui!. It the tcoen hundred ana lortw inoutand etwht nundreit l tion l know What his principles are. nor do l care. ana fourteen dollar ana eight ccnit, was ail ine nmney wneiner bo is a vt nig or n Democrat, a (Jalhnlio nr likely to he expended this year in Iruttluss legislation t rotesiant. What care 1 lor his political or religious by a Democratic Legislature, there might be some pro- crei d, so long as ho is consistent and pure in his mo- hahihiyol a small sum ol money aci umuiaiiiig ill Die tlvrsr lie Itmughl it necessary to do so at Hint lime, Treasury. The taxes are high enough in al con I because our garrison was small and tbo (own large, aim ii was nut prudent thai we should have ihe sood But Hie same extravagant Legislature the same opinion nf its superstitious inhabitants, and make ibem biiugliiig pobiiciniis, adjourneil to meet nt Coluiiilms favorably inclined toward us. Hence, ns a matter of di November next not lo pass wholesome laws In respect tn the citizens o Jalnpa, he ordered Ihe guard look alter Ihe interest ol the fMale, lull to surprise the lo rillute Iho Host, pen pie with their ignorance nnd wreck less legislation But where wns Gen. Scott while all this was Iran- lo look alter me spoils, nod plunder, ti pninin. the acting n Jalnpa r Junt where lie should have been last dollar out of ilm Stale Treasury! Steubenrille orer one kundreil miltt in atlvance , wttK the main at my at llrrald. Apportionment of Repreientatipn, In the I lament Representatives, ou Thursday, the Apportionment Bill, which passed the Senate some tiuio since, was paed a it came from the latter b.-dy. The net ion ot Cnugro on tho promises was rendered tiicesnry on account of tlio accidental destruction ol a portion of the population returns of California by fire. as in Iheir absence it was impossible I r the Secretary Pueda! He knew no more of this order nl Col. Clulds, than President Polk, who was then al Washington, I dare any of llmso sheet ihnt pave publicity to the sl imier, to prove thu contrary of this statement. Till en 1 wait. VY h. Guar if, Jr. Reading, Pa.. July 1, 1R5'?. OL0RI0U8 NEWS FROM MICHIGAN. Thu following rxtruct of a letter to a gent le nt the Interior to make the appointment according to m m In this city, from St. Josephs, Michigan, tells its the provisions of the law of i!:id May, ISjO. Ond the act of Congress just passed the whole number of Uepretentaiives will be fieu hundred and thirty-four, tUs- iriouieu us ioiiows, vi. . Maine New Hampshire Vermont Mnssai huSi-its Itliodo Island ........ Connecticut New York New Jersey ......... Pennsylvania Delaware ........... Maryland Ohio.... South Carolina mrgia Florida Alabama.... , Total G I Mississippi ...... . .( Louisiana Virginia , North Carolina. Tennessee , 4 : Kentucky 13 1 Missouri Arkansas Indiana Illinois Michigan Wisconsin ..... tow Tex..... California . 8 Mb own story St. Joskpiis, July SI, 1852. Dkar Sir; I am happy to inform you the Scott firea an burning brightly in the " PeuinsiilarSute." At no time have iho Whig prospects been better here than now. Nn, Uol excepting 1840. Our friend feel great oiifidetice wo shall carry the Slate. The parasites of Can feel tore, aud Will do little lo aid iu tint let-1 inn of I'ierctnud Kintr so it looks at this wiilimr. NmrM "" '1' Democrat, and influential ones, too, are leaving the hiH-oioco raiiKs on an sines, aim rallying under Hie iSVon! limner. How it Takks "This nomination of Scott wnoi gn down," croaks here and there a Pierce man, wilh as good an imitaiion nf confidence as hecaninusterl "our papers assert thai Hull. Judge ron-ron, nl Alabama, ihe Hon. R. Oil Ox, ol Georgia, and the eminent Squire W ituly, of Arkansas, are all out against him ; so he hasn't a thane." My gieeii Iriend ! you doii tseem to understand ihat Scnit wasn't nominated by ihe Fmi-Koos, Windyaand Mil" Oxen, nor nominated to please them. It would have been easy In please them with n candidate, (ex- ot those who had resolved to lo lor Pierce anyhow) but in pleasing them we should hnVe diiplensed the gnat hnly ot the nople. The iiomiiintinn is popular for reasons which set these men against it ami the more popular Hint Ihey ttrf against it. Kvery nun of them thai comes out openly against Scott will give him 2:t4 As the Demm-rntie papers nre very buy in nublishinu nil the litile inculeiiis of Mr. Pu hck's life, why do ihey not give men' prominence to the fact Ihat he started In politics as a J. J. Anon' man, nnd used bis hdluenen against (ion. J ackson mid iho Democracy T Is, ac Him., whu was lop. boilom nnd sides of New Hampshire Democracy, for ' Iban n quarter of a century, says of him : Frank Piercn commenced law business about the year IH.'ti, auri boarded widi bin t tther in Hillsborough, In that year ho mado ilm old gentleman, so far mm- emmii.lMl that us name was then nseitsa" ti is; pnntj uii.Miui il... ..niin- editor of the Patriot in 11 In. ii In .1. U. Ai inns: e uei neu aim imsim.-.. ,nl. H-ner. al lawyers of that day to call nut Iho strength of his lather's name against Andrew Jackson; nun u was not until Iho close of the year IS.'" that the sterling old patriot broke uway Inun the pernicious influence nl his degenerate son. Humor nays that Edwin I'ViM'.st will loon marry one of the finest women iu Philadelphia. Tn Battt.k nr thk Bkm. O dignmii's Messenger, published iu Paris, says a curious circumstance occur red recently at Guilleville, in France. A small farmer had in a Held abi.nl two hundred aud til'iy beeuives, containing a vast number nf lu es. He sent a man with a carl, drawn by five horses, to remove amno emili Irom the wall near which tlm hives were plaeei The carter hiving occasion to goto ihe farm house tied the horses in a tree. Almost immediately niter, a o V,M )ur vit,y )m carries off Triiaas, IIIUIIIIilMO ni lines, I'lUHT Mlli'lieu n ui" Running im iheir hives by the removal of the earth tmui Ihe wall, or exeiled by- the electricity with which the alum. nhe re h inoen.-d to be charged, issued Irom their hi a if in ohi-di- uco lo n given signal, an I with great lurv attacked the horses. In nn instanl Hie pour nut main wore entirely covered wilh I from head to fool; even their nostril were tilled wilh them. When iho cutter returned be loiilid nno of bis hor.es l ing lead ou Iho un.iiud, and the others rolling about fun oitsiv. His cries attracted sov-rat persons; one or ihein ntletiipled to drive away the bees, but they at tarked htm. and he hud lo plunge into n pond, and even to nlnee bis head under wuh-r lor a few seconds in or der lo escape Irom them. The cure of Guilleville also attempted lo approach the horses, but he, too, wn put lo llinht bv ihe enraged insect. Al length two lire enmiies weroMMit fir. and bv pumping on Ihe bees great number were kilted on iho horses or put to flight I he horses, however, were so much injured that they died in an hour. Tlm value ni ihe bees doslmv'd, wns 1 .'.Hill., mid of lhn horses, i :.0tli. A few day he lorn, bees In nn Ihe same hives killed seventeen gos lings. ie-nni Stiitchmnk. A writer in Ihe Ti II inner uive ail account oi inn successnii irea'inen. some ueumes.who li ul been pinsom d with s'rycnnine pnmiiess ot brewing iiropvni, ami nir, nydn was rec prepared lor well s bait. Melted hog s lard wasnil-ininisten-d to litem freely niter lin y bad stilb-reil in ureal ngony for evcral hours, and muni'di do ndiol was the couHequelice. Onto nm Scott. One of our delegates to the State Convention, who went to Columbus doubling, returns with a Ihon.iigb conviction that Ihe electoral vntes of Ohio will he secured lorScoit aud Graham, He says, allowing a mrgn per ceniBgo ior uesires anil preiu liccs, and deduct niie-tilth Irom what he knows of the (acts. Scott will carry Ohio by a decided majority. M The Lecofoeoa ihetuselves, everywhere out of ihe Statesman ollice, ndmit thin and don't rare if it be limy have no evidenro Ihat Pierce is either a statesman nr a soldier, and cannot muster any enthusiasm tnr a tliird-mte lawyer whom a set of political gamblers have fms led into a presidential candidacy, with a view lo their own advancement, should be I'hnnce lo be elected. Scioto tlairtti. A Ci KiiM S HisTontri. Fact. During the troubles in the reign of Charles 1., a country girl came tn Urn don In search of a pi 'ce as servant maid, but not sue -ieding, h hired herell lo rnrry nut beer fmm a warehouse, ami was one of those called tub women The brewer obnerving a good looking girl in this nccu patioii. look her into his family ns a servant, and after a short time marrird her. lb died while she waa yet a young woman, and lelt the bulk ol hi fortune. The Th number of arrests in Cinrinnalu for the week euding July 27lh, were over mil), ninmcnded to the yonug woman, a skillful lawyer, t. arrange her husband s nil airs. Hyde, who was alter wnnls Karl of Clanuidoti, finding Hut widow's forlum considerable, mart ied Irnr. By Ihi marriage then was im other isiin than si daughter, who wan aftet wanls tho wife of Jamea II. , and mother or Mary tu Anne, Qtieeua uf Knglaud.

VOLUME XLIJ. COLUMBUS, OHIO, TUESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1852. NUMBER 49. llH'tklii (Dl)io Stole Journal 13 I'PltLISilKH AT I'Ol.iMIHIH EVBItV TUKXHAY MolUINtl, 401. A L BlilUUMiK, SCOTT ft BASCOM, ltlll AMI I'Ellit BTUIAM K!VTKAN'K . -111 I r and ii) TMlMS-hni,! by until. M fl; Ha Till: lAfl,Y .lnt'ltNAI. I- lun.i-hisl toHiy xul.: iiixl In iiutil ( SsYunti vini. TIIK TUI-n KWilA .KM ItNAI, 1h 11 u yi-ur. UA TKS Oh' A U VF.H TlSttiti IS TtlH WHIM I. V . 17.' .V.I . l u ii and. ii'i-illsri at tfiUXi, " 3 I -E -9 -5 1 -2 mill h-siowiug lii" Vioeroyalty upon some nlliei branch of Mohammed Ali' family perhaps Sayd Pasha. will li Hilly succeed, tit. least for Iheprosont, niuj though it in tn In- doubted whether Ilia change would be much lor the belter, it could nut be for the worao. Sayd Pasha rrijili-ft here, am) in itt present Ailminil of the Kgyplian Navy. He )h n mull of some intelligence, lor iin Kgyplian. Fund Kifondi, the Kuvoy lately sent Irom the Porta, it) nlso hero, uud doing nothing. Kvo-ry tiling is in almost I ho Hume state of uncertainty as when l first lm nl cd in Kgypt. If the rumor in regard tn England in corroi t, it will delay u crisis for idiiiu linn', hut can hardly prevent it. I suppose some account of a difficulty between our Consul General mid tho Egyptian Govt.-mm cut has al-ri'iidy reached yon. Tito luct are simply these; Mr. McCuuley hud urged ihe claim of fv. Uarthow, an American, upon tho Government, and on finding the (finer resolved to protract iho atlair l'ur a noodles length nt limes declared that unload it wore not ud-jugiml within a ceriuin time, ho should break nil nil diplomatic relaii'.iis, atid strike his Hag. This de-iiimid met with no response whatever, and nt tin np-(minted limn lie wax ns good us his word. Tim Prime Minister hpcamo alarmed; a messenger wns domiciled lo I ho Viceroy, whu was then iu Upper Kgypt, mid il jo wholt) nll'ur wns settled wild mi alacrity most nu-i urn ii I in B-'vpiian olliciula. Tho Miiir was Imiftcd n(,'(iii, under a Hrthitu uf iwM)ty-ono uim I'min iln lor- irt'Hi, nil thti ciihitr rnruin UuiihiiIa humtiiifr ilu-ir cul-om at lint ami) time. Tint iR-riirn-iico, whnti'vcr may Iin thought nt' it at homo, produced a marked impreH-nion hero, and I liavii hennl the Coiimil-Generul'H roiiitie Hlrin,''ly coiiiiiifiulfd by KnriMii'iin renliletitn. 1 think it nun hardly IhiI to iiroilucu an oxcetleut etl't'Ct; lor it niTnntuiDTniua iw rnvPT-THE TflVPTT A W Mi ""iv v prompt ami viuiiruui ucuou nil un pun in 1 M,u,r 7M 4 -..um 1 lliillrllliU' ainl!il' i i'.ii fin i if. '"Mi '.n no; lllir. INOj ti H ll II ;, not; ti hi n. 17. : di in. i t. s-i. : iltur 1 minimi, ('Iiuiil'-mI-I" i in 'v I'liluniu, v nn i-A'-n t'li 'l1'"1'1 1 1'oliima, 1 cliutii';ill' 1 1 -1 1 lOllaci i.f tlii-tsl.r.l t ' t-iiriliTv,! on tlir iii'iilc 'M ln-i Ilu.IiiI milieu- i lm rpil .iinibtc, i-lv.... r.lv.... Iilili' tlx- ut- i.nMir. .t im il M.1i-I. III". A'lvi-itf-M iiiriii GOVKIINMENX ALEXANDUIA, Alkxanihiia, B.'ypt, Ajiril 111, The Indian Mail uuil iaM8uiii.'TR puHxed ilimuli Cairo llio liny afmr I iirrived, and nn tln-re wan no iec-niid ntciimiT down tlio Nile lorn wot;k, 1 had iimpl time tn Ileal my eyes, (which were iiiilrh dninnyed by I ha pnruHntof lotteri niid papers IVoin honm,) mid to sen nil th M(ilHi o! O;iiro, widish I had been obliged tn hmvn uiisetin, oil my Ihat vinii. Tho first two or three days of my stay worn Jiuie-liko nml dnlirioiut. The hedges and fhruhbery in tlm f-rtmt fipiaro, or rather park, of the Kbekieh were iu hliHsoui, and all llie gardens betwueti tlii city and tlm Nilo wi-m atfcped in the fraf(ratii:n f Imiinu blociiniiis. The 1'i-w deeiiln-otm trees wi-re tdollied in a t.-iuhir $wh, exrejit llie Bcncia, which remnmhers it liir hotim in Centrnl Alii-ca, and drops iul'iiliagn nt tho s'linw lime with il h brothers there. Fveryduyils yellow luavos rattled lo tin grnnud and its bmifilli grew more bam: ho that when I rude down the magnilicciit avenuo to (he palace of Hhoiihra, I nw tintliin;: but hiiiihumiI pictures. In the Khekiveli it was ibo laih n' May; while llioe who visited Ihe I'yramtds nuie over harvest fields, piled will) sheavefi. The excursion which I bIdiII longest reineinbur, was to lli-liopolis, about Iwn bours diilnnt. Tha nuul is bordered by large liehls of young clover, in whi li the Cairo horses were turned loose tor their numiid six weeks' piisturne The olive orchard nn eirln-r hand Wi-rn just beginning to bloom; the li;; tree was putting tortli her young shoots, and the vim, with the tender grape gave a goodly funell. It whs a plain n tho freshest garden untl pasture-land, relieved by the grnnd objects which elevated themselves above ami around its charmed horizon. Vi-nder, the purple l'yru-inids; in the S'HUli, the minarets of Cairo; there, the diMiies nf the tombs ol lh Caliphs; and the red Arabian Mountains, Mretclnn uway Inward Suez. Of lleliopolis, there is iit-thini; left but some mounds, sprinkled with hewn sloiie, mid a single granile obelisk, of a date aiiterinr to I ho time of .lnuppli. On the rotiirn to Cairo, I visited it garden belonging ton Cop-tic monastery, wle n in stand- n huge syo.uuoie tree, under which the Virgin ntnl Child rested, on first reaching Knypt. It is prnbably ii ihniismid years old, but that makes no dillerence lo the true believers, great numbers of whom have taken pains to attest their faith liy their names, which lin y have enrved deeply into the bark. Itut 1 have not the slightest doubt that il the true tables nf the hiw were iu existence and placed where the bunds of Chrmiitii travelem could rendi Ilium, the eriditial inscription would be obliterated in employment. And litis, I cm, insure yu it, good render, i a very small item m the iniquity of the finglif h tm law. Do iu longer wonder (hut Ireland is being decimated, nml England much thinned nf its inhabitants by einigi utiim J Thorn nre several iiieniburs uf the House of herds who have acquired (heir title to scats there in rather nn ambiguous way. For instnnco, the Duke of Cambridge, grand-Mill of George IV., ly the Duehesi id' Cambridge, an illegitimate ollspring, is allowed the title of his father only by courtesy, and upon condition, that lie never marries, ao that the title will expire with him. This gentleman, being u cousin of the Queen ou the father's Mile, it h said will, upon the decease of the Duke of Wellington, succeed to the olllce of comimitiderin-Ohief of tho army, nnil wo could not but remark upon the injustice of such an appointment, when looking at "his unexperienced fled tiling tho other day at a grand military ruview at Wo dwich, surrounded liy a brilliant tall' of nU wm-"oru votorniw, amongst whom were Lord Hardinge, Sir H. I. Knsi, find oilier of the dintinguislied old men who buvn hum conducting the wars in I ml in and at the Cape of fjnnd Hope. Charles II., by Ida uiistres. es, hud the honor of placing several Dukes in the House of 1'eors some of them by tho famous Nell (iwynue, others by the equally I'imouH ami eipiiilly lieautjlnl Duchess of Portsmouth, The present Dnko of Si. Albans is a great great grandson nf Charles I. and Nell Gwynne; and Btruiigo enough, a year or two since, married a lady lor her beauty, out of the same station and occupation that of a low comedian. our representatives, that the no pert tine lo Iho Amen i:au name can lm tiMauli.dicu in Ihe ignorant Orient. The rilv is Inll f K.,m.M..n u.Mti ! M...l a -wy'"-' otherwise, m.muof whom have fnruuil unimn and enrrv lhn "l"nber ol titled poisons in this Kingdom, at on a system of robbery and swindling. Few jiighl the pn seli' lime, who owe their birth, station and iin pass without a bloody quarrel or ti muider, and there puriaiice lo Iho slips of royalty, are more numerous are some streets lliroilgli which one cuiiuot pass ufler uat'K wiiiioiit inucii risK. ilia very hour l arrived here, a Maltese wan statihei in tho principal square, and since then another has boon dangerously wounded. However, 1 have lived three days without acci.lent, ami i than most loreigners are awat'o ol. i'lie present court, however, stands above impeachment, discoiintenalic ing iu every way iho licentiou.tuesa and debauchery which obtain. -d under iiiost of the previous mmi- xpect tn leave in good health to-morrow lor Hey- arch, and this example has exercised a most salutary mul. I go by ihe French flt earner, mid alter punning inroii'Mi the Mvriuli niiarnniine. snail mart nt once lor Jerusalem. After nearly nix mouths in Africa, I look lorwutd with pleasure to a fresh continent. u. t. Notes of Foreign Travel, inlhiouco upon every clans of society from the throne down. The I louse of CimimniiH, which has just been d is-dved by Her Majesty, after a continuance in olhce of live years, cniitnuied some men of decided merit; amongst whom may be mentioned Lord John liusscll, (the best man in the nation,) Lord !'alnierton. D'l. rueli, Kir .lames (iraham, Cohdeii, Walpolo, Hume. Most of the good members will be returned at the now election next week. It is expected, however, Sketches in the House of Lords. London, July 3, 18.V2. The r mail; of Mr. Dickens when bo was first in lin ed to the American House ol Representatives. that he was not greatly overpowered by the dinliu- that enough now members will bo elected to make the gnished appearance of its members," will certainly np- Hoimo overwhelmingly tree trade, mid then Ihe Derby ply with HK-reaied force, to the Itiiiish House o Lmds. ministry will go out and the reform aiiaUun will com. This will not be a muter of astouishmeut, however, I meiice with an intensity never betoio witnessed on hen it is remembered thai it is a hereditary body ol this island. noblei, not an eleci ive body ; nmt moreover, ibat the An a whole, the speakers in the British rarliamnnt lays of chivalry of manliness are passed; that these bear no cooipminnii to the speakers of Ilm American liiuiilie i have so rigidly adhered to the ancient ncloins Congress iu point nf oratory. Mr. (.'lay, Mr. W ehster, of marrying enual blood seldom permit ling a foreign or Mr. Cor in. would produce an ellect, if they could toss, and as is ihe cane, necessarily, frequently inter- be heard in the British Parliament, such as those ha mingling near blood; and further, that they live for riever witiieised bi fme. TheMt I'ailiameiitary speak-Ihe most part, a very arlilicial life, as far away from ers betray no emotiiui ; they do not deal in the tropes, nature as possible, and iu daily violation of Ihe organ- ligures anil hold comparisons of tho Auiuiicuu orator, tc laws of the body corporeal, and it is ea-ily under w hich oxcilo an tuidilorV feelings to tho highest pitch, stnml, that they cannot ben race of either vigorous but slick directly to the text, use good language and bodied, or vigorous minded men. The tirst wcw of good .judgment, but passionless, prosy, and nionoto the House ol l.nrds, Tidy verifies these observations, nous. The most obji'dioiiable future is their " mall' and a fuilher attendance upon its sittings, does not in nerisms," of which it scums impossible for them to validate thetr truthfulneis. It is to be regretted, in- free themselves; they have none of that impetuous deed, that there are many, when ilm responsibility of freedom of style ol the American orator, which ox their station is taken into account, who woii'd proper- hibits it-telf iu startling ejaculations, direct appeals to ly be classed as imbeciles. Then agnin, as a matter ol the loelings, the nwinging ol arms, and the contortions necessity, there is a Inrire niltuberuf vmini; men mere of the couuleuanco. Ami withal, they carry " P-irlia- six months. iNothmg is loo sacreit tn eseapo tlie vanity Hiyttl ,y t1(.jr fntl(r.' t.ftry demise, inherit ihe ineiitary " dec.ru n tea disagreeablo extent. During ill tlio iiame-ctiliers. r , . ... . Jllipnilllllll, (.. w....lr-u... I... I....... ...i i u.iirP win mm rriiiniiin nu r ,. ,. , ,. . ,. , ... ...lit. i-n i- .11 1 of winter travel Kvi-n tho itaid Oriotilalijiin of the i"iou unci uisnipauoii wt icu are inrown uronim inem, upon uio oeoaics 01 i ariiauieui, ue uns uearu nut one Idur inhabitants, who still look with Imm-st horror are rendered incoiiipeteut to tulhl the duties ol legis- hurt ol teeiing.aiul ttiat was Irom lirougbain; and he 011 the narrow-hrecclied Arab soldiers uud policemen, Uii.rs, in a mighty kingiloin like Great Britain, where felt nn if ho woiiUI have 11 aid something to have heard was siartleil Irom its propriety liy me uuprecein nicu Bt,.ii,ath o of the lirsl order is essential lo the tuail- a centum) " tiassiu-.-ut-anns," as the word is under- irropuon o .00 rno m - " 1 ,l:,,,rn0llt of its eo.m.licated idf.irs. Mo there are but a ond let the tiusiness id' the I louse of Lords ; uud al intigh the House contain no l'ilt, or Fox, or Burke. or Canning, yet (hero are a lew men deserving espo al notice. Foremost amongst tbeso as slatesuieii and speakers, political. ORAVE MATTERS, worth v thk .ikiuoijs attintion of tiik pkopi.koc oiiio. CIIAl'TKIt III. dred. Tho Viro Consul, who is a Syrian, was nih driven to distraction by having forty-seven impatient Occidentals on his hands atone time, nil warning to leave the next day, mid each di'Mriug to be attended to before alt iho others. The hotels were crowded, dratmiiion were nt uu enormous premium, nml every dahabiyeh that came down the Nile wiis ciunged tor st mil at home, ii is not generally productive of evil, because tho mind requires vartrty of excitement to keep it bright and active, a second voyage he..ro it b id been two hours al Boil- may bo im-mi. med the Karl of Derby, Lord Lyndluirsl, Campbell add Brougham, Iho Karl of St. Germans' and Sir John Sugden. The Karl of Derby, now 1'iime Minister, formerly lend Stanley, is (he leader of the House ot l.urds, a scholar of (be fu st order, a ready debater, and always listened to with deep interest, but he is without indu- m o, because of his ultra notions. Ink, Indeed, 1 was lold that domestic servants, and donkey. boys eien, who h id a tolerable sinatlertu:; ol any European lau'iae, were laaen iisiiingiiiuen ; mm a good bumuess itew made of it. Mn toy wny down Ihe Nile, I was rivaled with stories ot the stilus gotten Irom credulous Americans ami iinioceiit hnhtimen( and how this one spent nil Ins money ad paid enor mous commissions lo Copt merchants ..r adducing (l .,rmm , n Binli h(raight, genteel looking man, 11..11 a lew poum.s.wni e a,,, ner so,.i ,..s cum -s ... (f f . o(k ( a.istocnt at I heard of an Kuelishu.an who spent nearly f.'.IMiri for rao.cm.y wr-o.g o.. ...e gre. pn.gr. the voyage to Aboii-Sunblu and back, and another tn.iveliients nl Ihe ilay. Asa Mininter, ho d.-es not pos- II. e rontiileiieo ot l.ioie that) one tilth ol the peir plo nf Knglaud. ami will be compelled Iu resign before ihe cud id' ihe year. Thanks lo the Dispenser ot all great and good events, lit-'ht is breaking upon the nniiilri o the C lie, I Mi people, and limy are heginiiing to understand that the word "progression incmis some- thiol I.oul Brougham is still die best speaker in the British Parliament, posvessiug in bis style, more uf the Ameri can lire and animation, thai, any other member, mid it is this which has rontiibuteil most iu gaining for Inn the reputation, nt homo, of being eccentric; and ntric' he is, it the word he socoiistrii"d as to mean din whose bill for fowls, miik and other necessities bv the way wns $..011. Il is no wonder that Arabs get school ed in imposition, when lliev Hud such easy victims Tho whole journey of twit mouths. In Almu-Simhle and h ick, need not cost umre than f 100 for one person, or $ HH) lor two, including the dragoman's wages. Al the time of tnv iirrival. there were only six Am ericans in Cairo, besides inysell. Five ol them leli two days ago for Hue and Ga.a, mul the other (Mr. Har rison, id Kentucky,) joined ine lor the tour through Sylla. Al the time t lell. there were mi a uoeiurnv-eleis in all the h dels. I was the ol inhabitant of the t.uietaiid comfortable Hotel del'Kurope, to which I would recommend all persons who love nenUies, or der and civility. People were talking of the iuteune wind, so called because it blows lillv dnys. 1 found """l'1"" '"is compeers. But the great d.hVulty with the temperature rather cool than warm, nud the U tfcn, which blew occasionally, tilled the nly with dust. the tioble l.ord, no doubt is, that like most old men, he has grown excessively vain, and esteems it all impera- and iu ill is way bo has almost entirely Ueuiralied hi former all powerhil influence. Hew frequently dn it present, but wa mild ns a jtephyr, compared to iho h.rnance-hko blasts ol IheAlriciui Desert, Gentlemen prepar ed themselves for the journey across the Desert by purchasing broad -hn nunc it hats, gieeii veils, iiouiiie lined umhrellBB. and blue spectacles. These may be all very good, but I have not yet seen ilm sun or fell W(, observe (his, and huw sad a picture Ihe heat which would induce me to iiuopi mem. i would not oxebanu'e my recolb-ciions of Hie fierce red Desert, blaziiiL' all over with inieti-est lit-lit, lor any amount of green, gauy sky and blue sand. And ns for an umbrella. lh desert with a rotiMnnal had around you, is tie desert at all. Vnil I t lei the sue lay hit sceptre ou your bead, if you want lo know hi newer. I left Cairo with regret, ns 1 left Thebes and the White Nile, and evcrv other place which tiivesmiea llial be came to neck. Moreover I left behind lue my The First View of Jorusalcin. Baard Tavlor, in bis last letter puldi-tlied in the Now orlt Tribune, gives Ihe fxllowin-i ai enuut of bis lirft impressinii of ihe Holy nly : Hut when I rhtuhed the lust ritlL-o, and looked ahead wilh a nort of painful suspense, Jerusalem did not ap pear. We were ,'.inill teet ahove the Mediterranean, whoso blue we could dltinctly se (ar to the west, thiough notches iu the . bain of hills. To Iho north. he inouuimiis were gray, ilesoiate and awiul. Not a sht ub or lien relieved their trihtful barrenness. An upland tract, covered with white volcanic lock, lay tn lore us. We met peasants with asses, who looked, (to my eyes.) ns ii they h id just lelt Jerusalem. Still torwiiid we urged our horses, and reached a ruined g-iiden, surrounded with hedges ot cactus, uvr which I saw domes and walls in Ihe distance. I drew a long I l.iealh and lonked at Francois. it was jogging along without turning liii head ; he could not have I n so rent if that wa really the city. Presently we ached another slight rise iu the rocky plain. He be gan lo urge hi paining horse, and at tho same iuslant wn both lashed tho spirit into ours, dashed on nt a brenkueck gallop, round the comer of an old wall ou the lop nf tho hill, and In ! the Holy City ! Our Greek jerked both piuols Irom Ins holsters, and tired them into the air, a we reined up ou thu steep. rrom trie description ot traveler, 1 hud expected to see in Jerusalem an ordinary modern Turkish town; but that beb.ro ine, with its walls, lortrosses and domes, was it not stdl the Oily of David I saw the Jeriin ilem of the New Testament, us I had imagined ,o.ig lines nt walls crowned with a notched para pet, ami strengthened by lowers; a lew domes and spires above them; clusters of cypress hern ami there ; -this was all that was visible e the city. On eith live duty lo ho heard, upon every question winch is side the soil sloped down tn the two deep valleys over presented for itiseii-Vioti, in season or out of season, which it hnng. Ou II ad, the Mniint of Olives mwtieil with n chapel nud mosque, rise hiti ami steep, but directly over the city, the sibt fell far away upon tho lofty tiniuiilaius of Moab, beyond the Dead Sou. Tho scene was grand hi its simplicity. The prominent colors were the purple ot those dm taut mountain, and the hoary gray ol the nearer hills. The walls were uf the dull yellow ot weather-stained mar I 1. 1 ,.t.,l ll.a .,lv tra ll. ihtrlt 'viira Mini ninnlilit .lensitlg mat Some llietl IU U.e i Ko.r.. w.rrivsl 1 ln.ve biked down umn. Ihe to see the IniiUy "I poor human nature draw a veil ol obscurity over the bright escutcheon of a name that would oiherw.se have been rendered immortal. It would seem to be a pmvidencenf God, are taken Irom the scene of actum, ,.jlv rn,m (no Mount ot Olives, and up toil Inun the in the zenith of their glory, lest iliey might jeopardize valley ol Jehosapliat; but I cannot restore Mm illusions their reputation, bv nine iiiii"uarded act. or iiiiudioiotis I "1 iho lirsl view, linn nf conduct. ,ord l.yudliurst has long stood in the foremost rank faithful dragoman, Achiuel. He had found a new sou I ,,f British statesmen, and is yet found taking nil active in his home, bin ah invalid wile, wtm .lemanuoii M(irt i( debate. . i,po. lance, but bo is now Very ins r!1re, aim so ,,e ns , ,, , g.w, ' r ,,, ,, rilmlv d.-clining. in n. t.v h.s elmsant devotion, his activity. Nir John Sugde,,, iho Lord Chancellor, is said lo b esty sad int.-Hij-erice, mid I had always treated him the clenrest hesib .l lawyer, nnd Ihe most popular man rather as a Iricict iiian a servant, i neiievn no reauy who ti is sat niton ine wooi-saca since ine days nt t;ar- Wo allowed our horses to walk slowly down the re- luainiiiii half mile hi ihe J ntl'a gnte. An Kiigllshman. with a red silk shawl over tils head, was sketching the itv, while nn Arab held nn umbrella over htm. In ide the sale we stumbled upon an Dalian shop will. all Italian sign, mid alter threading a number ot iiitn- ate nassaiies under dark archwav, and being turned oil iron, one hotel which waybill ol travelers, reached another, kept by a converted German Jew, where we loiind Dr. Kobinson and Mr. My Menu, wim nmu nr- loved me, for he turned pale under lh darkness ol his I j(mi Wolsey, not excepting l.ord l.yndhiirnl, Broiigh- rived yesterday. Il ounds strangn to talk ot a Imlel am or Truro This otlice statuU next tho crown in rank, and curi- skiti, when we parted at Itoiilak. For the hrst time ill live mnlilhs. felt Inst ami lonely. Mr. MrOailley mir nnnmil CiHinrul whs kinil I'lHiltl'li tn indorse in cerlilicateuf n-commeiidaiion, and I am sure that in. ens enough, is the only ollice of importance in Ihe American win. engages Achmet tiaidi will be diimp- British empire, open to merit alone. And upon this pointed. I little bit of republicanism, the British people pique uir. ici,a..iey .o.u ... . , i i . i , it V u ll I ibenicelves terribly. Its eligibility, however, require had a pleasant ,,,-nage a far as Atb h. which wereach- pre-appoi...melit by the crown to the peerage. The ed alter dark, me uein wa crowneti won snn -.j .(..- ........... in Jerusalem, but the world is progressing, and there nre already three, Irish Troubles, The Dublin Nation, a leading Irish Itoiiinn Catholic journal, thus auuouncea the news of the recent riot at Storkporl, under tlio hetd nt "Hell broke loose; "I he demon nf intolerance is up in Knglahd. 11 Bloodshed, sacrilege and arson inaugurate the open merchants on their way to the great fair of tho Kbekh hy niher limn rum blood or a peer, if it be only of lP " rt""n '""""I"' , , , 0-...1 i i T....t.. i.. d... n.ih. Timrti . i . . " The atrocities committed at Stockport have neve Z7h W I...1.I . ,rv v,;'r. m hnuor ! ihb M'.n- ' " ' '" hm, ,ur, ,1 in tl w.l.l.-.unllmv.k ..I .1,. - ' . ..... I 111 ill Uh.I Miff 1,11 Mini I'lllllllM'lnil U'll.l t.lla tlllli ft I ...... Il in. u uiiiula 111.. I .it Ul... I.,., i, , . l Ii. I..... U n !...( Ilm nr.,iil.. ill I.i.lltl IS 111 milt IiiIIF I .... n , - """J " '.. ,nm months from this lime. Ii is not unusual for two bun- which may be mentioned paunnt, as n cnnsolnlory ph-h' tho revival ol ihe bloody era of perwciition. This is not lite casual explosion of mob license. is the work id' Protestant rulers. They furnished Ihe incentives. I hey drew the sword anil thiealeiied tin lh"inselves on benches and chairs, and give ll.e.r bod-1 les into the pnwcr of A r ib liens, which are the Bedoii-1 inn of the tl-'ii tribe, lank, vortcinus and iusnliable. It was nine o'clock Ihe next moriiillir when wo n-achei Alexandria. The far for iho trip is l... including pan- sable meals. Thu steamers leave both cities every live i i ,i i. b-..,,,,!,!..,! 'r,.i. .i,il ..;,. ,.f :..r i.. -.....i.ii.. a i . ' I hmgs Ihe most sacred have been pmlaheil ti... .LiA1 I..P I ii, in ilnuiiia uml aiieli I ..... - . .... i (' hrisl illll Ti'lllpln has l.eetl sac k ed nnd detllol i-hed ii mnii. no in-. T.n- ....... .. - (,r , Wll whenever n minisrry noes oui, 1110 i.oni , , ... ,i o , 1. ..f ....... L.. i.ld. ., .rB. iiii..b . . HI.U nm ui uiiimiMM-i uii- iii.it n.u innii-iii. in isT. Llllllllll.il lllinni nil'- kuii.i""" l mii I--I-- - ,11... .,ll. .......,, ..I.,, nl., I l I ..,. in . 1UVI , .1 . I. . I 11 I . .. . . , .1... ,l,. hri.k whl i ,lrivo it iiwiiv. Hut wo " " ' s " " "V il.-n..U"n. in- n.Hiy .in ii.i.i i.i ui.. iw.or, vi.ii.iwi - ' . i . ri'-.iiiio i k. nnin . ....r . ....n v .... ...i 11... ...... 1 1 . -r .1...... -II t-.. I- .. V....t ....I l...l....nluK- l.,r 1 l"'ili"n i ,'"", nii-ni 'J ..,' "i n j-m, nm. ..... i lml wmn 'I'll iin- ii KOI nn "I ui"Ol ! ni mii-sji-.jin, n.i m. j - - , . . . i ii I."- .A' n,. i r...m.iuin:. nm i i til I liecei.lt er. f. ion itiiL'rt L'llic in tiilsuiess nl A " MU Men openeo nun noicueiiroriil armies ni ueiuii wan nut groat. I he steamer did nol pass udo the Man lawyer, I hero arn now six gentlemen living, Who " r moiidteli Caiuil, hut we were uaiiMerreu 10 a son i liavo bad a wat on lhn wniilsiirlt, nil men ol niiuicioe catial-boat, dra.vn by A sieaui ing. mere were no I lor u-liii h Ihev do nosilivelv tinllnnt' ' And this is not l.r nt them to check iheir mvrmiibuis, who can say all ; public men of all kinds, clerks, and even servanls, -'""'t eo iho fires ol Smiililield blau.g for uii.l l.r n...isi....e.l ..Il in ll.i.wv. Lr.. I'"'""'"' " ..'J'"" 8,""","K ' ... wnli Popish victims heinre the year wauesr salaries, mid are thus enabled in ine a life of idleness. . . J rlnri benreparcd. Let her link her siren: i d i ti, ,,flPu l ,.H,.Wle,l ili.. c.mi. 'I ""'y clioiisi. Il ts one oi ine iiiosi atioiiiiuaiile sys- amuml tho sanctunry. 1 his is tin tune lor cabal mid ' 3 1 .-. J . :i . i : i I .1... ...... ..I. i. !.....! i knv ii,. i4.r .... nt nnd I i nl.-rime bin lend. Ii. tbo llliliio ot ndluiotl mid roiili. IMinV lUOSV CPUp eiMM l.liM.n inuinn. I uu .iiin.ro.i - - j o . L-ci rapidlv. Tho teiitsof the engineers are pitched it is dillleiilt in an enli-hteimd nnlio.i like this, to find ry. b-t I n (m.IioIu s ol Ireland ronlederaie and pre- l....a,..Mn do. ,,Uee -ml Atleh. and laborers .... ,.r -.,,1, I,.. - ",""r "Heresis siUK lllli. Ilis.gll.hca.ice Oe , , l i ..,.. 'i'i... ,.i.i ,mr. B ' 1 tore the shadow ol Iho coming persecution, are aireaoy w-'i-hn.i Mif! ; " laboriuL' c asses, main whom taxes bear must heavily. Mi.,r.,. m l.-n.t ilu.v -le.ll iiilni-'it nn lal.er.inc .nil- . n..w beo.e wo. It. rt iieuiu for the bri.lues and 'r'w rtt,ct "f "Irl' ' m,,cn nutn ,My ' V' w"'"1"1 n '""'bh reinlanee. They shall not strike ut n "I i i... I I. I u Cut I r .... il,. f :ul ..v.-xiil nvnr Ilm rnrnse ol a l.iitiou ..7... ' .....;.!... .i : . . r . i ... w .... v.. -i. ..... i oi H. re is an index to the tWlimr which recent events settled. Abbas Pash.i persists in rel.mng ihe Tnzi- nwli ,' ,l iiin. ' bave stirred up among the lloman Catholic populalh... . . : .,i-,i.u,.l h il.ni I.., iv ill bnauo. 1 , ,jn nm,,,, doiniiitnlis. 1 1 atlterede.iis ill ine p: mni, nun ... ,! , A cnMi oceiirred recehtlv. lor the truth ol w hicn tne ..i .i. lv.i. T..I.,- at.it .....I ilm Ui......i' .... ...I I.- il. ......... ....ij.ai.1 K.nii mi. I in Mil 111 ib..i,..i ill" ilk. I.--.H-... i. .....n .. ..." , . f. u. ,..,.ii...L.. i i..i v... wilier can vouch, having recived the statement Irom proclamation, forbiddini; the public celebration roiauoii ui'iwi'pu r,gv p. niiii . iiir j - i ' .... i .1 . . ..i.i;.. i.,..l.u,. i... ... ..it. ... ..... I t atiiin.it it nis ni ine on r ilea coiii'eriii ii. w o n n i i imnt imii-iin nn." i u iuii i. niin " ii" i..,;." , . even l. mi"" 'in- ii niuiiii j unmu. it. - m "'... p.. i . - . .. ...:.i., i ..... I....I : .i... mi.. ,r e,,.,,. iv . ;n...r..wii,l nr.i'ti.'n wiiicu may now he aided nm iteciara'ion, in uu MV U IIK' ""'i-'Mlir uu...- lll"ir -l' " " """ " ""I " " . .- .. .11 .1 i a . -..I..- Al.n... Pu.l.,1 ! nn. ii ms ih.in ni eh! v I t i . i iii '...lu,r "peecii iron, ine inrone, ' 10 iipimui inn 1 niifsiiiiu m iiiiieiniii i. - . I wns noniism 11, nun erni cn-rivs, ns in 11 Mini, s-.n (i, , 1 .i,... i,.; ,i , liberty which ts the natural result.' Tlm storm hai ong been githering, and it looks an H the uuinreax bigoted, sell'Hh and debased as oyer held power, ami (. ( (i.r ( pp1Jl,tir w,irb wa m y(inr( lUegoverumcn. o ' I - " (1, ,,,' their salary.) but being in 1 ioi. wrioKi revenue of 17,fuo 01)11 out uf a n,.piilaii..ii ol of certain important iiiloriimlioti connected with their Sto, kp.rt was but the hemld of troubles nf a still anmo lour or five uulhnua, ho squander enormous sums I deparlnmnl, anil I bus holding an ndvni.tageel the Gov .... ..1. 1 . ....1 l.ia .;.. avilinir ilm filW intMl I . .1 1 I I ... I li dM rUn the other, like dennm-.-N. K. trong party at Coostantinople iu favor tf deposing him yra oi age, and will, without doubt, engago in oilier txprtti. The Publio Printing. The framecs of ihe new constitution saw fit to incorporate in it a clause, that all the public printing tor the State of Ohio, including the printing ol bills, documents, journals, volume of laws, blanks, X-c, should bo lot by contract to the lowest bidder. The clailvj reads an follows: "The printing ol the laws and journals, bills, legislative documents uud paners for each brunch ol the General Assembly, with the printing required by the rjxecuuve nna oinnr departments ol Ntalo, shall be let hy contract to the lowest responsible bidder, by such executive oHicers, and in such manner as shall bo itre- scribed by law." Sec. 2, Art. 15. Tho reader will perceive that this is positive, une-tpiivncal, and admits of no evasion. Not a single item of the printing could he done constitutionally, by the Legislature last winter, except iu this maimer. About this, there can be no doubt in the mind of any man who has capacity tn comprehend ihe simplest proposition. Soon niter Ihe election, lint fall, nnd when it was as. ertaincd that there was a largo Locofoco majority in both brunches, it was rumored, and very generally bo mveU, that the editor ol the Ohio Stiitammi waa in in: live correspond' with (be leading men of his rfiity lor Iho purpose (,f securing tke entire printing of both Home for the srmon, without any competition. We have nn positive evidence that this rutnnr was true, further than a knowledge of tlio fact, that he finally ancceeded in accomplishing Ihii object! By reference to the clause in the constitution, it will ho seen that the printing was to be lot out by such of doers nf Statu, and in such manner us should bo lire ribud by law. As there was no law uu the subject, it became necessary for thu Legislature, if they desired to pay oven u decent reaped to the commands of ilia' new instrument, and tho sanctity uf the oath they had taken to support it, to provide, at once, for thu public printing, iu accordance with thu positive commands id' the constitution. No inun uf sense will pretend that a kV time was not ample to pans a law for the pur pose id this compliance. If, fur luluro use, it was thought necessary to guard this subject more carefully, and to digest its delails morn elaborately than could be done, then u law for future use could have been adopt-ed alter more mature deliberation. These uro tho views which honest, common sense, law and consiiui-lion abiding men would at once avow Let us le w see what was done by ihe Legislature: On Monday, January 5th, both Houses of the new Legislature met in Columbus. The members were duly called and each look u solemn oath to support tho constitution of the State of Ohio. In the House, we think uu tho lirst day nf tho session, Mr. Buss, a Locofoco member, introduced a resolution authorizing the Clerk ol the House, (M. 11. Mkimhy, brother to Samukl Mi daht.) to procure such printing done iu nkotild be ordered by the Home, the rate of compensation for which, should be Iho same an the saiuo clnssol printing should be taken at by the lowest responsible bidder under the law in be passed for that purpose. This resolution was adopted. It was reasonable n" a temporary measure. I wasu compliance intpirit with the constitution. Such printing as was indispensably neci'ssary before the law could bo passed would be done, and the payment should be at the sauiu rates that wero to be paid to Iho successful bidder for that class nf work. On Thursday of that week, it was found that Mkpa-h t was not willing In take the work on that condition, nud a nioti.-n to rccomider the resolution was made, so that the obnoxious clause deliniug the amount of payment might bo stricken out. Here was the first exhi bition of the cloven foot. Hero was the first patent net in the House w hich showed a determination to tram ple under foot not only the letter, but Iho spirit of the now coiiNlitutioti. Wo wi-re at nneo applied to by members, lo know if wn would do tbo House printing on these terms. We replied promptly that icewonld, and we gave it written statement to that ettect, which was read lo the House bv Mr. Siin.LAiiAltutn, of Clark. But, it wan of no avail. Tho majority had determined that Miniur slmuld hnvo the printug, not only without competition, but apaintt the ejcprcut spirit of ihe lotisiiluiioii. So, the original resolution was reconsidered. I his clause obliging mm o intco wuui others would bid to do ihe work for, was stricken out, and limn, after it was fixed to suit I hem, it wa again passed. So much for the opening act in the House. In tbo Senate, the notorious and niccrupuluUH Ciuui.ks B. Fi.oon, wns elected Cb ik. A resolution wan introduced bui homing him lo contract fur the we-1 ceMiary printing ftr the Senate, at price not higher than thotepaid by the Senate hit year. Inasmuch an the Sen- prmlliig was done, last year, under the lowest Idd, the violation of tho spirit of Ihe cotmiitutioii was not palpable as it was in Ihe House. Of cntir-o Fi oon took the work to the Statetman office, as every body peel eil. Having all this fixed according lo previous arrange ment, matters went on swimmingly for some Weeks. The committee on Printing, in Ihe two lloii.tea, took p tho l.usiiieis with great moderation, ami mado ho jHirt tor several weeks. Meanwhile the fact leaked nut thai both M. II. Mk- uary ami Cmaiu kt Fi.iaui had contracted with Mk-lurtr not only for the neceuary printing, but bad also bargained for printing tho Journal of the two I tauten. Thero was an assumption ol power ol a gross nud moat outrageous character. Remember tho House had directed their Clerk In procure such printing an the. lloHte thould order, no more. But iu violation ol this, ho contracted lor printing tho Journal, nt high rates, without the shadow of au'horiiy to do so. This was ton bare faced a piece of corruption to gn unrtl Imko I. A large number of the Locofoco members were unwilling to stand up and face that sort of music. They must repudiate that act, or expect to lm repudiated themselves. A resolution, calling nn M. II. Mr part for informa tion, elicited the fact that ho had ngreed with his brother for printing the Journal of ihe House. Mr. Casau then introduced a resolution, assorting that this contract with Mkhabt for printing the Journal, was wholly uuaulhoried by the House, nnd was void, and lirected their Clerk lo utility Samuel Medary of their b'cision. After a stormy debate, this resolution patted by a decided majority. The people of the State have not yet forgotten the rnss and outrageous conduct of Mhakt ill attacking A personally abusing Caah, because ho had dared to inirodiico such a resolution Wo have had nn in stance of rnfli inism so disgraceful for years. There wan a most galling vole of neimure, not only on Samukt. McbAitr, but more especially on M. H. M. nAnr, for his conduct. It was frit, but was mi more than be de served. The next day CuiHi. r WKi.t.En moved lo mvHMi'iVr this stinging vote ol consul o, but the House refused to to so, and laid tho motion to rrcon.tiWer.on the tabl where ii remained till the end of tlm session. But, in spite of thin rebuke, in npile ol the passage of this re ution, which v' reanniu in lull lorce, Samu. i. Mk nnr hns proceeded, in direct defiance nf tho Mouse, to print the Journals, nnd we know that they have been liiibhed at that olhce. It is well enough lor the people tn understand thai by this net of lawlessness, ihey will bo compelled pay a much larger sum from iho Treasury than they would have ib.ne it this wot k had been given out lo the lowest bidder, under tbo law. But what tin the manager of ihat concern earn for the tax payers or the rotisiiiutioii when Ihey stand In their wny to pub. lie plunder! I In the Senate, Fi.eon's nulhority gave him tbo right to contract for lliesitTwiry printing, ami, under this he made a bargain fnrprintiug the Senate journals. Kvery man knows that Ihi" was not nectttary printing, nt that llmn. It should have been done by lhn lowest bidder, under the taw. Hi hi"lructinii gave him the right to procure the priming f bills, and reports that worn wanted for iinniediaifl " But the Senate never ordered this contract le lm rescinded, and under it Mk-dart has primed the j"rnals of tho Senate. Thus it will be seen that mni wero so managed, as to give the entire printing of b" "essoin, with the single ex-caption of tbo laws, into Mudary's bands, not only without law, but against the express commands of the Constitution. Let us now see whit speed the Legislnturo made in passing a law tn carry ounni provision about printing. After some weeks delay, Iho House roinmilten report ed a bill nnd linally p"ed U. The bill went ti the Senate, and there met tlm docidinl hostility ul one JW infill, who ha pjiened to be chairman rmjprinting, in that body. Mungen bud drawn up a bill, and of course he thought his buiilling inoih more respectable than mil which came from the Hoiitn, He moved lo strife out the House bill, and insert his own, and, ultersoim weeks delay, and soint. debate, this wna done by tin Senate. Tin new bill was sent to the House, and that body, by dome strouge fieak, still thought that their bill was the best, and they refused to concur in ihe Senate nmeiiibuetit. lore waa a nice chance for siiutindoriti" time. Tlm bill was iu just the fix the Loco fc cos desired. It was hung up between the two Houses, and, in the meantime Medary was very cou.fortublu doing all the woik! Three months had passed, and nothing was accomplished. It was not till near tho close of the session that a sort of compromise was effected, nud the bill that is now a law, was passed. But its friends were very careful that it should not pass in time " ,nUv -'Ii,lt upon any of the work ' the, past session. The entire priming of both bodies has thus been thown without competition, uud against the requirements of the con stitution, into the Statetman t hands. Mkoaht accom ilished his object, but at the expense of many tho. tandt of dollart to the tax payers of the State. He bus demonstrated what not only foes, but fricn ds know tn bo a truth, that, when cupidity demands it, neither law or constitution m. any restraining force upi n him. i here are several matters worthy of serious reflec- 'ion to the people of the State, in view of this history. It is notorious that tho printing ns it ha been managed has cost taoeml thmtamd dollart more than it vVeutdhnve cost the State, if our proposition had been taken, or if a law had been passed putting Ihe work tn the lowest bidder. These thousands of dollars co into the pocket fan unscrupulous partian. If it had been fairly, lohcfllly and legally done, we tdinuhl have boon saved the labor of this exposure. But it has been done by thu most palpable fraud, tho mnt barefaced, impudent assumption, that has ever been witnessed in Ohio. When there is complaint about high taxes, let the vo ters remember that several thousands of their money went to pay o'lhat concern ! Again, the total disregard of the requirements of the constitution, is a signilicant fact in the comiuouccmorit il their career under that instrument. W ill any body contend that ult this work was done legally 1 Docs any body believe, that any other than partizan teehtigs kept the printing bill back to the last of the session We present these faett f.r iho consideration of ihe people of tho Stale. They have a moral that cannot bo misunderstood. It is for Ihe jnp!e to upply the remedy for such open, palpable nud niitrageoua viola tions of duly and uf right. HAMILTON COUNTY HARMONY REEMELIN ON JUDGK WARDEN. The polilic;il cauldron boils and seotht's in Hamilton county. It in nut a war between Whigs and Locofocus, but among the Locnfocon thuinselvcs. It has raged with great violence for weeks, and is yet the topic that fills the Locofnco papers. The Inst Cincinnati Kn'uirer, has an article written by CtiAitt ks Kkkmki.in, nnd uddresscd to Judge Waii iikn, of the Citizen. Il is bitter ami severe. Wo give soitio concluding paragraphs, to show the spirit of the quarrel. Thus, Mr. Warden, you stand convicted before the world, of Iho character 1 gave you convicted by your own showing and your own admiisious. lotl knowingly and basely lied, when you charged me wilh being a bigot. Voti lied, when ymi charged ine with being u disturber of the peace of the Democratic party. Von lied, when voil revamped the old falsehood about my court house speech. i mi lied when ymi charged mo wilh writing antl- Catholic letters from Kurope; ami ou lied, lastly, about my lute speech in Uoiumbus. Am I loo bard on von T Nn ! Dn I use too harsh language T No ! I do but say what every honest man has said already ! may be silent when party mends, or who at least should bo friends, stab tne iu the dark. 1 may be silent when a pack of politicians are repaying me lor a lon-r and disinterested, faithful and active service to the Democratic party during IS yeais. by the baiett ingratitude. I may be in lent when hrctid uud butter politicians assail ine, who are leveling iu the harvest which the seed they nt least did not sow iu "Mi, has brought forth. 1 will bo hilent, even if the party should be made lo record publicly the secret cabuls ol my enemies, nod when defamation shall have done its woik, under all this I rhall bide my lime, relying upon justice in ilm end; but when a blink hearted bigot assails my private character; when, in this laud of freedom, be dares arraign before a tribunal that fins pre-judged me, my rcligmu views, iheu I meet such wretch Willi Ihe language ami the rebuke uu de serves. It js high lime that such as be, who, with harmony ou their bps, " Kiss but to betray, iiuld be made in feel thai Protestants and Catholics ed none of Ids puny clfort. Tho Catholics hav ler defenders, and more skillful pilots, and they, ihe great mass nl Ihein, including, unless 1 am much mistaken, the bead nl that church uud its clergy, repudiate the self constituted pacifier. " et mo nay tn him in conclusion, that he is wofully mistaken in my religious sentiments. Let him next time impure lirsl and then nccuse, nud il inuv save him the thankless lnk nf painting characters which are ptnlly lalse, whether treated as hchous nr us lads. " May lie repent and sin no more." I nssnre him, I feel for him, as I part with him, nnthiiig but pity- pity, that so little a m mi should be tiler Itiall I my sell supposed. C. It K I'M KLIN SOUND AMERICAN DOCTRINELETTER FROM UEN. COMBS. When the Whiff Central Committee deter mined tn call a Muss Convention ut Columbus on the 'IM hist., the Secretary address, d letters to several em itient gentlemen in other States, inviting thorn to be with us on that occasion. Among others, an invitation was sunt to Ilou. Lkslik Comhs, of Kentucky. Iu response to that invi atiou, we received the following lettor from thnt distinguished Kentuckian. Il is an able, dignified, and convincing document, and is worthy of special consideration by tho American people. To us of the West it appeals with peculiar forco, in view of the great interests involved, and tho known, and openly avowed hostililv f air. 1'uhck to ihe ays-tem of the imr-. emeiit of Western rivers and harburs. We commend this letter to the attention of the peo pie of Ohio. It was received a'ter tho session of tho Convention: LtTTI.E Compton, R. I,, July lb'. W. T. Uascum. Esq. Dear Sir! Your letter of the fdh iust. has been forwarded to me from Lexington, Kentucky, inviting rue to visit Columbus, on the 'liml, mid address tho Whig Mass Convention. The situation uf my family, at this time, will prevent my doing so, or short us is the notice, so deeply impressed am I, with the importance of ihe occasion, that I would certainly corno and ndd my mite of influence to the largo amount, which I doubt tint, will bo then and there concentrated, for the public good. Never before, in my time, bus an election been pending fraught with such vast consequences to the prosperity and happiness of the American people never one in which the great valley of the Mississippi, especially, from the northern lakes to the gulf uf Mexico, Was so vitally interested. From the time of Gen. Washington up tn 181(1, the principle of proUction to American labor, was generully sanctioned in our system of revenue, by discriminating duties, nml even Polk and Dallas were elected by fraudulently hoisting the Tariff Hag of lit 12 to the mast head. Now, tor the first time, tho black Brititk ling of free trado, is boldly hung out, mid the past history of iho Standard Di'arcrtui ihe Locofoco Democracy, ahneiubled in convention, at Baltimore, proves them to be worthy nl'ihepositioiius.signed lliem. Now, for the first time, tu our history, do wo witness the startling fact, of the Knglish I'n ss, headed by the London Timet, the most potent daily paper ill the world, taking widen in our party contest, impudently allempt ing to dictate to American freemen. They go lur Pierce ami King, against Scott and (ha ham. Sh 'II wo submit f Shall wo give up what our Revolutionary hdhers fought and died lor, nnd gloriously wrested from the haughty king of Foighud, or by bold, united resistance, maintain our denr-boiight liberties ? Trusting in Providence mid a good cause, I am for battle now mid forever not doubting that our appeal to the patriotism and intelligence of the people, will prove triumphantly successful. Again, if fierce and King bo elected, farewell fo. ever, to all itnpmvenients of the harbors upon our great lades, nml tho navigation of our rivers, Milliin s lipid) millioiitfjwill annually be taxed upon ihe swear of our faces, to regulate and protect foreign conimerco. Not a dollar to facilitate conimerco among the interior States, Salt water traffic wilt ho decided tu bo constitutional, hut fresh water repudiated, as dangerous to State rights, ami violativeof theresoliilioiisof '9S, '9!) I! and the Democratic Biilnmore Platform I!! W ill Ohio, thus help to dislraucliise hersell T Agree to pay taxes forever to support a system of policy so ruinous to all her interests T II n til the deed is done, I will never believe it. Would tn God, I had a Voice loud enough to be heard from end to end, from side to side, i f her broad fertile lietds, I would wake up her husbandmen and laborers every where, In ns-ert and maintain their rightF. To demand, that as ihey have an equal share .f the burdens of the United Slates Government, ihey i i i i i . nun unii i uow on, iii ounce in me uummii it nr- u ,lm l r,r.M, ,.,l ,.,y an o.Ul purl,",, ..f .1. la-.Hit. c,ip- ,, ; jHljc, lu J.y kMi ,, IMm, Uim The Scott Democracy, lhn editor of iho Cleveland tore t City receives heeriug advices from Mahoning, Columbiana, Wavm1 l KichlHiid counties, the Democracy are breaking loose from iheir sellish leader, and g'.ing over by ozena to the reoplo s cuudldate. It is eoiili.leiilly bo lieved that in these counties Ihe iMiial Locolnco major ity will be cut down fully one half. Hero are a few items irom lhn " inral districts : A Irieiiil in Mahoning county, "ending us a third instalment nt subscribers, says : ' huctosed is $.1 lor the Campaign torett Vtly. rime ol the ten sulicribersare, ir rather have been Uemocratt. ihey now all an b.r tt. 1 lus will make inriy names l have sent you There are only four Whigs among them. Thistown ship given about six to one lor the Democrnlio ticket, but my candid opinion is that Gen. Scott will have a iuiiriiy iu it. ' 1 lie Legislature ol last winter cured our Democrats, d to run such a man tm Pierce against Geii. Scull, is not only nbsurd but a sin. Next week you may 1 r twenty nm re nhrrih'rrt, nnd a 1 bill with them.1 We received, last week, n largo list from one of the strongest Democintic townships in Columbiana. the writer ol the letter remarks Unit the usual Wiwa vole ut that township does not exceed b.'i to 711, Hiatal leant illll voles will tin polled lor Gcu- Scott, and adds: ' You have now 17 Democratic subscribers in this township nil for Old Lutnly's Lane.' Our heaviest club is hi Richland cuuiiiy. H num bers about Hit Campaign W eeklies, many of which are taken by men wtm, heretotoro, always voted llie nluim Democratic ticket. Our agent nt that point sajn Unit the skies are brightening, and the dark clouds nl Lo- cofocoisin are breaking away, nnd that all honest meti, without respect In pai ty, have declared lor the second w asinngton.' A postscript to a letter Irom Wayne, containing the names of .V. subscribers, say: " Ibis township will liive Gen. Scott Ml morn votes than were ever polled lorn Whig candidate before. The township east ol ours will give n S.-oit majority no W hig ever carried il before.' Il may be well lo remark in this connection that all these advices come directly and Ireshly from llie larui- iug di-li lets, w here court house clique inllueuces ate hut little felt, and w hero men obey llie hon-sl, sincere dictates ui their hearts and luiiijt i. ve nave re ceived not less than lifty loiters w ithin a fortnight from the rural districts, containing about l.t" new sniisen. hers for tlio Weekly Forest City, in Irmu twelve to lif teen counties: each of which oive the same testimony, that Gen. Scott will get large nb-rs ut voles hero- tul'.re cast lor tbo Locnlnco ticket. The same reasons are invariably given for tips change nf poll ieal sonli nieiit and action, viz: The iiiUmotin conduct of the last Locofoco Legislature: lb- iinisMMhV " ot Piero1 nud the Anti-American and ProS'uvety i liaracbT ot his platform, and ihe great public services nud quallli cattoli ul Hell. Scotl. I loinag. .goes may mm mm rave, but llie people are determined lo make tho I ml Hero President." General Scott in Mexico. Wo have at length a copy ol the order istued by Gen. Scott while Cimiiiunderin-Chief of tho American army in Mexico, with respect to the deportment of his soldiers in presence of the religious (Catholic) obser-vnucea of the Mexicans. We give the order entire, though part nf it has uu relation to the matter under discussion. Here it is; HkADQUA TITERS Or THE ARMY, ? Mexico, Sept. 4. 1847. $ OKNIUAI, OnDBIW-0, i!5)7. 1. Here, as iu all Roman Catholic countries, there are frequent religious processions, in the streets, aa well us in churches such aa the elevation of the host, the viaticum, &o. 2. The interruption of such processions has already-been prohibited in orders, and as no civilized person will ever wantonly do any act to hurt the relinions feel. ing nf others, it is earnestly requested of all Protei-taut Americans either to keep out of the way, or to pay to the Catholic religion and its ceremonies every decent mark of respect and deference. II. In the case of the viaticum (visits of consolation to the Sick and dying,) t,.mD.uni)Hrs of corps -r rm quested, when called upon, to allow two Roman Cath olic soldiers to perform the usuul functions on suchoccasions. 4. There is every reason to believe that a verv tarye distribution of knives and dirks has recently been m aoo io noerateu convict (thieves and murderers) tor the purpose of assassination American ulilinra fnmul drunk or otherwise otf their guard. measures urn iu progress to search out and seize or execution the instigators and leaders of these as sassins. Iu the meantime guards and patrols will search all suspicious persons, disarm, and, if necessary, 'mum nii'ui n;r uiHi aim piiiiisinneni. Hy command of Major General Scott. H.L. Scott, A. A. A.G. We shall not write one line in defence, nor even in explanation of that order. There it is; nnd if anybody sees tit to vote against Gen. Scott because of it, lot him go a bond 1 The hero canuut need such votos to elect him. Wo give a fuller nccount of Gen. 8cott'a coiirso with respect to the religion of Mexico from the pen uf an -nicer woo was wuu mm uirougnotn ins Mexican wnpuiyti. We eive this also without comment, fur none can be needed : To tke Editor of the Berkt and Schuylkill Journal: I desire to make, through Ihocolumnsaf your widely circulated paper, a brief public statement concerning Gen. Scott nud the Cuthulics in Mexico. 1 do this because the question has been asked mo an hundred times over within the last month " Did Gen. Scott order ymi hi kneel before the Catholic priest while in mexico r piuw, u waa my good fortune to follow Gen. Scott Irom his landing at Vera Cruz to the City of Mexico, and I can say in all candor mid truth, that I never heard of such an order, tier do 1 believe any Indy else ever heard of such an order, emanating from Gen. Scott. True, ho was respectful and hu mane in all that ho did or said to the Mexicans. This is stumped indelibly upon the page of history, and yon may search its records in vain lor a campaign that waa conducted wilh such unparalleled humanity as ihat iu Mexico. Soon after the battle of Cerro Gordo, be addressed " n humane and re-assuring proclamation to the Mexican people." Iu that document he tells them : "Wo have not profaned your temples, nor abused your women, nor seized your properly, as limy would have yon believe." " Wo say this with pride, and wo confirm it by your own bishops," &o. "The army of the United States respects, nnd will always respect, private property of every description, uud the pioperty of ihe Mexican Churches." " Mexicans ! the past cannot be redeemed, but the future may be provided lor. Repeatedly have I shown you ihat the Government and people of the United Slates desire peace desire your sincere friend-ship."" I am mnrching with my army upon Pnebla and Mexico, 1 dn not conceal it; from those Capitols I shall attain address you. -1 desire jieace, friendship and union. It is for you tu elect whether you prefer wnr. Under any circumstances, be assured I shall not fail in my word." Witti such peaceful and conciliatory messages did Gen. Scott address the Mexican people. And while ho did no, he asked his soldiers to act at became Ame ricans. So such humiliations as loul mouthed pnliti inns would have the peoplo believe, were ordered bv him; and I now do, in justice lo ihe Commautlnr-iu- Very truly Your most ob't servant, LKSLIK COMBS. through ihe niii.paigii, pronounce the chare a libel- I mis falsehood, and its nnilior, if not a base demagogue, a political falsifier, w hose blackened heart is destitute oi every principle ol truth and honor. The slander originated, perhaps, I'mm the fact that I Col. Child a veteran ntlirer ol the Ut Artillery did, Iwii'ie netting (inventor ol Jaiapn, order the main guard to salute the (lost ns it passed the guard house. I am tint stitVicieutly pasted up in tho ceremonies of the Ki.niish Uhurch, lo give a correct description ol the parading of the Host, As much as 1 saw, however, it was u procession that formed nt one ol tho churches. i:oiilsliig el one or two priests, hearing crones ; these by throe hoys, who earned bells, and Squandering the Publio Money. The legislation ol ihe last l ieioTal Assembly, mad up io incimilly nf uulb'dged " Deinoerals," has elicited the almost uu verbal censure of the pimple, irrespec live of paftv, lor iu injudicious nets, waste of lime. and Unprecedented extravagance. I-i.r evidence Unit this censure is not wiltjout cause. we refer our readers to the laws just published ihrmii h-out the State, by both Whig and Democratic journal. they will there see, by comparing appropriations nt were preceded that body with those uf former Legislatures, tho uu- rung them while llie procession moved, lo notify the warranted extravagance of the latter. people of their approach. The priests are followed by I he total approprinlit.ns during the sessioii o 1H:,0- single tile processions, consisting nl about thirty or lor- 1 amounted lo In this sum it w ill be re- ty, walking on either side nf the street. These nearly inhered that llie ex nei.se ot the Constitutional Con- nil carry luiitenui, (it beinff always in the nitjht) and volition were included or at least an appropriation lor as they move along the streets singing chants, the Mex that purpose of l.r,IH0 was mado. leans mvcrence it, by gettiiiff on their knees, where During Hie silling ol the last Legislature, known to Ihey remaiu uncovered until Ihe procession is nut ol be us void ol principle as that, ihe total appropriation wiidit. w lien it prua.-s a military post, I tie guard is al amounted to ifMll.KI 1 811 ! Just fl7'J,(JS(i 80 morn I ways turned nut to salute the Host. This they do hy than that o the preceding Legislature, expenses o the gelling nn their knees, and coming to a present arms ; Consiitiitioiuil Convention and all. and it was ibis, Ihat Col. Child ordered our guard lo There is, in consrquence of which, ns might be sup- do during a parade of the hosts, through the slret-ts af posed, a di tn il iii tlio treasury ol f J.o,ti7i 4b, whu h Jaiupa, aud im one mat is tuily acquainted with the tin Auditor ol ntato is authori.eu to make up out ul circumstances ol the case, will charge ihat veteran ot- tlio suroius hind. iicer oi impure motives in so urucriui!. It the tcoen hundred ana lortw inoutand etwht nundreit l tion l know What his principles are. nor do l care. ana fourteen dollar ana eight ccnit, was ail ine nmney wneiner bo is a vt nig or n Democrat, a (Jalhnlio nr likely to he expended this year in Iruttluss legislation t rotesiant. What care 1 lor his political or religious by a Democratic Legislature, there might be some pro- crei d, so long as ho is consistent and pure in his mo- hahihiyol a small sum ol money aci umuiaiiiig ill Die tlvrsr lie Itmughl it necessary to do so at Hint lime, Treasury. The taxes are high enough in al con I because our garrison was small and tbo (own large, aim ii was nut prudent thai we should have ihe sood But Hie same extravagant Legislature the same opinion nf its superstitious inhabitants, and make ibem biiugliiig pobiiciniis, adjourneil to meet nt Coluiiilms favorably inclined toward us. Hence, ns a matter of di November next not lo pass wholesome laws In respect tn the citizens o Jalnpa, he ordered Ihe guard look alter Ihe interest ol the fMale, lull to surprise the lo rillute Iho Host, pen pie with their ignorance nnd wreck less legislation But where wns Gen. Scott while all this was Iran- lo look alter me spoils, nod plunder, ti pninin. the acting n Jalnpa r Junt where lie should have been last dollar out of ilm Stale Treasury! Steubenrille orer one kundreil miltt in atlvance , wttK the main at my at llrrald. Apportionment of Repreientatipn, In the I lament Representatives, ou Thursday, the Apportionment Bill, which passed the Senate some tiuio since, was paed a it came from the latter b.-dy. The net ion ot Cnugro on tho promises was rendered tiicesnry on account of tlio accidental destruction ol a portion of the population returns of California by fire. as in Iheir absence it was impossible I r the Secretary Pueda! He knew no more of this order nl Col. Clulds, than President Polk, who was then al Washington, I dare any of llmso sheet ihnt pave publicity to the sl imier, to prove thu contrary of this statement. Till en 1 wait. VY h. Guar if, Jr. Reading, Pa.. July 1, 1R5'?. OL0RI0U8 NEWS FROM MICHIGAN. Thu following rxtruct of a letter to a gent le nt the Interior to make the appointment according to m m In this city, from St. Josephs, Michigan, tells its the provisions of the law of i!:id May, ISjO. Ond the act of Congress just passed the whole number of Uepretentaiives will be fieu hundred and thirty-four, tUs- iriouieu us ioiiows, vi. . Maine New Hampshire Vermont Mnssai huSi-its Itliodo Island ........ Connecticut New York New Jersey ......... Pennsylvania Delaware ........... Maryland Ohio.... South Carolina mrgia Florida Alabama.... , Total G I Mississippi ...... . .( Louisiana Virginia , North Carolina. Tennessee , 4 : Kentucky 13 1 Missouri Arkansas Indiana Illinois Michigan Wisconsin ..... tow Tex..... California . 8 Mb own story St. Joskpiis, July SI, 1852. Dkar Sir; I am happy to inform you the Scott firea an burning brightly in the " PeuinsiilarSute." At no time have iho Whig prospects been better here than now. Nn, Uol excepting 1840. Our friend feel great oiifidetice wo shall carry the Slate. The parasites of Can feel tore, aud Will do little lo aid iu tint let-1 inn of I'ierctnud Kintr so it looks at this wiilimr. NmrM "" '1' Democrat, and influential ones, too, are leaving the hiH-oioco raiiKs on an sines, aim rallying under Hie iSVon! limner. How it Takks "This nomination of Scott wnoi gn down," croaks here and there a Pierce man, wilh as good an imitaiion nf confidence as hecaninusterl "our papers assert thai Hull. Judge ron-ron, nl Alabama, ihe Hon. R. Oil Ox, ol Georgia, and the eminent Squire W ituly, of Arkansas, are all out against him ; so he hasn't a thane." My gieeii Iriend ! you doii tseem to understand ihat Scnit wasn't nominated by ihe Fmi-Koos, Windyaand Mil" Oxen, nor nominated to please them. It would have been easy In please them with n candidate, (ex- ot those who had resolved to lo lor Pierce anyhow) but in pleasing them we should hnVe diiplensed the gnat hnly ot the nople. The iiomiiintinn is popular for reasons which set these men against it ami the more popular Hint Ihey ttrf against it. Kvery nun of them thai comes out openly against Scott will give him 2:t4 As the Demm-rntie papers nre very buy in nublishinu nil the litile inculeiiis of Mr. Pu hck's life, why do ihey not give men' prominence to the fact Ihat he started In politics as a J. J. Anon' man, nnd used bis hdluenen against (ion. J ackson mid iho Democracy T Is, ac Him., whu was lop. boilom nnd sides of New Hampshire Democracy, for ' Iban n quarter of a century, says of him : Frank Piercn commenced law business about the year IH.'ti, auri boarded widi bin t tther in Hillsborough, In that year ho mado ilm old gentleman, so far mm- emmii.lMl that us name was then nseitsa" ti is; pnntj uii.Miui il... ..niin- editor of the Patriot in 11 In. ii In .1. U. Ai inns: e uei neu aim imsim.-.. ,nl. H-ner. al lawyers of that day to call nut Iho strength of his lather's name against Andrew Jackson; nun u was not until Iho close of the year IS.'" that the sterling old patriot broke uway Inun the pernicious influence nl his degenerate son. Humor nays that Edwin I'ViM'.st will loon marry one of the finest women iu Philadelphia. Tn Battt.k nr thk Bkm. O dignmii's Messenger, published iu Paris, says a curious circumstance occur red recently at Guilleville, in France. A small farmer had in a Held abi.nl two hundred aud til'iy beeuives, containing a vast number nf lu es. He sent a man with a carl, drawn by five horses, to remove amno emili Irom the wall near which tlm hives were plaeei The carter hiving occasion to goto ihe farm house tied the horses in a tree. Almost immediately niter, a o V,M )ur vit,y )m carries off Triiaas, IIIUIIIIilMO ni lines, I'lUHT Mlli'lieu n ui" Running im iheir hives by the removal of the earth tmui Ihe wall, or exeiled by- the electricity with which the alum. nhe re h inoen.-d to be charged, issued Irom their hi a if in ohi-di- uco lo n given signal, an I with great lurv attacked the horses. In nn instanl Hie pour nut main wore entirely covered wilh I from head to fool; even their nostril were tilled wilh them. When iho cutter returned be loiilid nno of bis hor.es l ing lead ou Iho un.iiud, and the others rolling about fun oitsiv. His cries attracted sov-rat persons; one or ihein ntletiipled to drive away the bees, but they at tarked htm. and he hud lo plunge into n pond, and even to nlnee bis head under wuh-r lor a few seconds in or der lo escape Irom them. The cure of Guilleville also attempted lo approach the horses, but he, too, wn put lo llinht bv ihe enraged insect. Al length two lire enmiies weroMMit fir. and bv pumping on Ihe bees great number were kilted on iho horses or put to flight I he horses, however, were so much injured that they died in an hour. Tlm value ni ihe bees doslmv'd, wns 1 .'.Hill., mid of lhn horses, i :.0tli. A few day he lorn, bees In nn Ihe same hives killed seventeen gos lings. ie-nni Stiitchmnk. A writer in Ihe Ti II inner uive ail account oi inn successnii irea'inen. some ueumes.who li ul been pinsom d with s'rycnnine pnmiiess ot brewing iiropvni, ami nir, nydn was rec prepared lor well s bait. Melted hog s lard wasnil-ininisten-d to litem freely niter lin y bad stilb-reil in ureal ngony for evcral hours, and muni'di do ndiol was the couHequelice. Onto nm Scott. One of our delegates to the State Convention, who went to Columbus doubling, returns with a Ihon.iigb conviction that Ihe electoral vntes of Ohio will he secured lorScoit aud Graham, He says, allowing a mrgn per ceniBgo ior uesires anil preiu liccs, and deduct niie-tilth Irom what he knows of the (acts. Scott will carry Ohio by a decided majority. M The Lecofoeoa ihetuselves, everywhere out of ihe Statesman ollice, ndmit thin and don't rare if it be limy have no evidenro Ihat Pierce is either a statesman nr a soldier, and cannot muster any enthusiasm tnr a tliird-mte lawyer whom a set of political gamblers have fms led into a presidential candidacy, with a view lo their own advancement, should be I'hnnce lo be elected. Scioto tlairtti. A Ci KiiM S HisTontri. Fact. During the troubles in the reign of Charles 1., a country girl came tn Urn don In search of a pi 'ce as servant maid, but not sue -ieding, h hired herell lo rnrry nut beer fmm a warehouse, ami was one of those called tub women The brewer obnerving a good looking girl in this nccu patioii. look her into his family ns a servant, and after a short time marrird her. lb died while she waa yet a young woman, and lelt the bulk ol hi fortune. The Th number of arrests in Cinrinnalu for the week euding July 27lh, were over mil), ninmcnded to the yonug woman, a skillful lawyer, t. arrange her husband s nil airs. Hyde, who was alter wnnls Karl of Clanuidoti, finding Hut widow's forlum considerable, mart ied Irnr. By Ihi marriage then was im other isiin than si daughter, who wan aftet wanls tho wife of Jamea II. , and mother or Mary tu Anne, Qtieeua uf Knglaud.